PREFACE
[20] It is necessary to subject one's self in all fear to the powers
ordained by God, and likewise to serve them. For every power is from God
the Lord. Nor does it therefore seem absurd or foreign to ecclesiastics,
by serving kings who are, as it were, pre-eminent, and other powers, to
uphold their rights ; especially in matters which are not contrary to
divine Truth or honesty. But one should serve them not alone in
preserving those dignities through which the glory of the royal majesty
shines forth, but also in preserving the abundance of worldly wealth
which pertains to them by reason of their station: for the former cast a
halo round them, the latter aid them. For indeed abundance of means, or
the lack of them, exalts or humbles the power of princes. For those who
lack them will be a prey to their enemies, to those who have them their
enemies will fall a prey. But although it may come about that these
accrue to kings for the most part, not by some right that has been
thoroughly examined into, but at times through paternal customs, at
times through the secret designs of their own hearts, or occasionally
through the arbitrariness of their own sole will, nevertheless their
acts are not to be discussed or condemned by their subjects. For the
cause of those [21] whose hearts and the motions of whose hearts are in
the hand of God, and to whom by God Himself the sole care of their
subjects has been committed, stands and falls before a Divine tribunal
alone, not before a human one. Let no one, therefore, no matter how
rich, flatter himself that he will go unpunished if he act otherwise,
for of such it is written, "the powerful shall powerfully suffer
torments." Therefore of whatever nature the origin or manner of
acquiring may be or may seem to be, those who are officially deputed .
to look after the revenues should be none the more remiss in caring for
them. But in the matter of collecting, guarding, and distributing them,
careful diligence befits those who are about to render an account, as it
were, of the state of the kingdom, which, through the revenues, is
preserved from harm. We know, indeed, that chiefly by prudence,
fortitude, temperance, and justice, and other virtues, kingdoms are
ruled and laws subsist; wherefore the rulers of the. world should strive
after these with all their strength. But it happens at times that what
is conceived with sound counsel and excellent intent is carried through
by, so to say, a routine-like method. But this is not only necessary in
time of war but also in time of peace. For at the one time it displays
itself in fortifying towns, in delivering to the soldiers their pay, and
in very many other ways, according to the quality of the persons, for
the sake of keeping up the condition of the kingdom; at the other,
although the weapons are at rest, churches are built by devout princes,
Christ is fed and clothed in the person of the poor, and, by persisting
in other acts of benevolence, it exhibits itself in charity. But the
glory of princes consists in the mighty deeds of both seasons, but it
excels in those where, instead of temporal riches, lasting ones, with
their blessed reward, are attained. Wherefore, illustrious king,
greatest of earthly princes, inasmuch as we have often seen thee
glorious in both seasons, not sparing indeed treasures of money, but
providing for the suitable expenses according to the place, time, and
persons, we have dedicated to thy Excellency this modest work, not
written concerning great matters or ill brilliant discourse, but in
rustic style, having to do with the necessary observances of thy
exchequer. We lately [22] saw thee somewhat concerned as to these, so
that, dispatching discreet men from thy side, thou didst address thyself
to the then bishop of Ely in this matter. Nor was it extraordinary that
a man of such surpassing genius, a prince of such singular power,
should, among other greater matters, also have provided for these. For
the exchequer, indeed, comes to its laws not at haphazard, but through
the thoughtfulness of great men ; and, if its rules be regarded in all
things, the rights of individuals can be preserved, and what is due to
the fisc will come to thee in full; which same thy hand, which ministers
to thy most noble mind, can suitably distribute.
FIRST BOOK.
In the twenty-third year of the reign of King Henry II., while I was
sitting at the window of a tower next to the River Thames, a man spoke
to me impetuously, saying: "master, hast thou not read that there is no
use in science or in a treasure that is hidden?" when I replied to him,
"I have read so." straightway he said: "why, therefore, dost thou not
teach others the knowledge concerning the exchequer which is said to be
thine to such an extent, and commit it to writing lest it die with
thee?" I answered: "lo, brother, thou hast now for a long time sat at
the exchequer, and nothing is hidden from thee, for thou art
painstaking. And the same is probably the case with the others who have
seats there." But he, "just as those who walk in darkness and grope with
their hands frequently stumble,-so many sit there who seeing do not
perceive, and hearing do not understand." Then I, "thou speakest
irreverently, for neither is the knowledge so great nor does it concern
such great things; but perchance those who are occupied with important
matters have hearts like the claws of an eagle, which do not retain
small things, but which great ones do not escape." And he, "so be it:
but although eagles fly very high, nevertheless they rest and refresh
themselves in humble places; and therefore we beg thee to explain humble
things which will be of profit to the eagles themselves." Then I; " I
have feared to put together a work concerning these things because they
lie [23] open to the bodily senses and grow common by daily; nor is
there, -nor can there be in them a description of subtile things, or a
pleasing invention of the imagination." And he, "those who rejoice in
imaginings, who seek the flight of subtile things, have Aristotle and
the books of Plato; to them let them listen. Do thou write not subtile
but useful things." Then I; "of those things which thou demandest it is
impossible to speak except in common discourse and in ordinary words."
"But," said he, as if aroused to ire,-for to a mind filled with desire
nothing goes quickly enough,-"writers on arts, lest they might seem to
know too little about many things, and in order that art might less
easily become known, have sought to appropriate many things, and have
concealed them under unknown words: but thou dost not undertake to write
about an art, but about certain customs and laws of the exchequer; and
since these ought to be common, common words must necessarily be
employed, so that style may have relation to the things of which we are
speaking. Moreover, although it is very often allowable to invent new
words, I beg, nevertheless, if it please thee that thou may'st not be
ashamed to use the customary names of the things themselves which
readily occur to the mind, so that no new difficulty from using
unfamiliar words may arise to disturb us." Then I; " I see that thou art
angry; but be calmer; I will do what thou dost urge. Rise, therefore,
and sit opposite to me; and ask me concerning those things that occur to
thee. But if thou shalt propound something unheard of, I shall not blush
to say 'I do not know.' But let us both, like discreet beings come to an
agreement." And he; "thou respondest to my wish. Moreover, although an
elementary old man is a disgraceful and ridiculous thing, I will
nevertheless begin with the very elements."
I What the Exchequer is, and what is the reason of this name.
Disciple. What is the exchequer?
Master. The exchequer is a quadrangular surface about ten feet
in length, -five in breadth, placed before those [24] sit around it in
the 'manner of a table, and all around it it has an edge about the
height of one's four fingers, lest any thing placed upon it should fall
off. There is placed over the top of the exchequer, moreover, a cloth
bought at the Easter term, not an ordinary one but a black one marked
with stripes, the stripes being distant from each other the space of a
foot or the breadth of a hand. In the spaces moreover are counters
placed according to their values; about these we shall speak below.
Although, moreover, such a surface is called exchequer, nevertheless
this name is so changed about that the court itself which sits when the
exchequer does is called exchequer; so that if at any time through a
decree any thing is established by common counsel, it is said to have
been done at the exchequer of this or that year. As, moreover, one says
to-day at the exchequer," so one formerly said " at the tallies."
D. What is the reason of this name?.
M. No truer one occurs to me at present than that it has a
shape similar to that of a chess board.
D. Would the prudence of the ancients ever have called it so for its
shape alone, when it might for a similar reason be called a table
(tabularium) ?
M. I was right in calling thee painstaking. There is another,
but a more bidden reason. For just as, in a game of chess, there are
certain grades of combatants and they proceed or stand still by certain
laws or limitations, some presiding and others advancing: so, in this,
some preside, some assist by reason of their office, and no one is free
to exceed the fixed laws; as will be manifest from what is to follow.
Moreover, as in chess the battle is fought between kings, so in this it
is chiefly between two that the conflict takes place and the war is
waged,-the treasurer, namely, and the sheriff who sits there to render
account; the others sitting by as judges, to see and to judge.
D. Will the accounts be received then by the treasurer, although
there are many there who, by reason of their power, are greater?
M. That the treasurer ought to receive the account from the sheriff
is manifest from this, that the same is required from him whenever it
pleases the king: nor could that be [25] required of him which be had
not received. Some say, nevertheless, that the treasurer and the
chamberlains should be bounden alone for what is written in the rolls in
the treasury, and that for this an account should be demanded of them.
But it is believed with more truth that they should be responsible for
the whole writing of the roll, as will be readily understood from what
is to follow.
II. That there is a lower one and an upper one; both have the same
origin however.
D. Is that exchequer, in which such a conflict goes on, the
only one ?
M. No. For there is a lower exchequer which is also called the
Receipt, where the money is handed over to be counted, and is put down
in writing and on tallies, so that afterwards, at the upper exchequer,
an account may be rendered of them; both have the same origin however,
for whatever is declared payable at the greater one is here paid; and
whatever has been paid here is accounted for there.
III. As to the nature or arrangement of the lower one according to
the separate offices.
D. What is the nature or arrangement of the lower exchequer?
M. As I see, thou canst not bear to be ignorant of any of
these things. Know then that that lower exchequer has its persons,
distinct from each other by reason of their offices, but with one intent
devoted to the interests of the king, due regard, nevertheless, being
paid to equity; all serving, moreover, not in their own names but in the
names of their masters; with the exception Of two knights, he, namely,
who conducts the assays, and the melter. Their offices depend on the
will of our king; hence they seem to belong rather to the upper than to
the lower exchequer, as will be explained below. The clerk of the
treasurer is there with his seal. There are also two knights, of the
chamberlains. There is also a certain [26] knight who may be called the
silverer, for, by reason of his office, be presides at the testing of
silver. There is also the melter who tests the silver. There are also
four tellers to count the money. There is also the usher of the treasury
and the watchman. These, moreover, are their offices: The clerk of the
treasurer, when the money has been counted and put in boxes by the
hundred pounds, affixes his seal and puts down in writing how much he
has received, and from whom, and for what cause; he registers also the
tallies which have been made by the chamberlains concerning that
receipt. Not only, moreover, does he place his seal on the sacks of
money, but also, if he wishes, on the chests and on the separate boxes
in which the rolls and tallies are placed, and he, diligently supervises
all the offices which are under him, and nothing is hidden from him. The
office of the knights, who are also called chamberlains because they
serve in the name of the chamberlains, is this: they carry the keys of
the chests; for each chest has two locks of a different kind, that is,
to neither of which the key of the other can be fitted; and they carry
the keys of them. Each chest, moreover, is girded with a certain
immovable strap, on which, in addition, when the locks are closed the
seal of the treasurer is placed; so that neither of the chamberlains can
have access except by common consent. Likewise it is their duty to weigh
the money which has been counted and placed by the hundred shillings in
wooden receptacles, so that there be no error in the amount; and then,
at length, to put them in boxes by the hundred pounds as has been said.
But if a receptacle is found to have any deficiency, that which is
thought to be lacking is not made good by calculation, but straightway
the doubtful one is thrown back into the heap which is to be counted.
And take note that certain counties from the time of king Henry I. and
in the time of king Henry II. could lawfully offer for payment coins of
any kind of money provided they were of silver and did not differ from
the lawful weight; because indeed, by ancient custom, -not themselves
having moneyers, they sought their coins from on all sides; such are
Northumberland and Cumberland. Coins thus received, moreover, although
they came from a farm, [27] were nevertheless set apart from the others
with some marks placed on them. But the remaining counties were
accustomed to bring only the usual and lawful coin of the present money
as well from farms as from pleas. But after the illustrious king whose
renown shines the brighter in great matters, did, in his reign,
institute one weight and one money for the whole kingdom, each county
began to be bound by one necessity of law and to be constrained by the
manner of payment of a general commerce. All, therefore, in whatever
manner they are bounden, pay the same kind of money; but nevertheless
all do not sustain the loss which comes from the testing by combustion.
The chamberlains likewise make the tallies of receipts, and have in
common with the clerk of the treasurer to disburse the treasure received
when required by writs of the king or an order of the barons; not,
however, without consulting their masters. These three, all together or
by turns, are sent with treasure when it is necessary. These three have
the principal care of all that is done in the lower exchequer.
D. Therefore, as I perceive, these men are allowed to disburse the
treasure received, in consequence of a royal writ or of an order from
those who preside-after consultation with their masters, however.
M. They are allowed, I say; in so far as they are entrusted with the
payment of the servants of the lower exchequer, and with buying the
small necessaries of the exchequer, such as the wooden receptacles, and
other things which will be mentioned below; but not otherwise. When any
one brings a writ or order of the king for money, by command of their
masters that sum which is expressly named in the writ may be paid, with
the understanding that, before he go out, he shall count the money
received. But if anything be lacking, he who received it shall return to
the exchequer and shall give an oath to this effect: that be has brought
back as much as he received, adding this, upon his conscience, as
is done in other things; and this being done the rest shall be paid him,
it being first counted in the presence of all by the regular tellers.
But if, the conditions being known to him, he shall have gone out of the
door of the treasury, [28] whoever the person, or however great the
loss, no heed shall be paid to him. The offices of the knight silverer
and of the melter are conjoined and belong rather to the upper
exchequer, and therefore will be explained there with the other offices.
The office of the four tellers is the following: When the money is sent
to the exchequer to be counted, one of them diligently mixes the whole
together, so that the better pieces may not be by themselves and the
worse by themselves, but mixed, in order that they may correspond in
weight ; this being, done, the chamberlain weighs in a scale as much as
is necessary to make a pound of the exchequer. But if the number shall
exceed 20 shillings by more than six pence in a pound, it is considered
unfit to be received; but if it shall restrict itself to six pence or
less, it is received, and is counted diligently by the tellers by the
hundred shillings as has been said. But if the coins are from a farm and
are to be tested, 44 shillings from the heap, being, mixed together, are
placed in a compartment by themselves, and on this the sheriff puts a
mark; so that there may be afterwards a testing, which is commonly
called assaying, of them, as will be made clear further on. It shall,
moreover, be the care of those who preside over the Receipt by virtue of
their masters-that is of the clerks of the treasurer and of the
chamberlains - when the money is received, to put aside weights of the
tested silver and coins from a farm, placing certain marks on the bags
that contain them, so that, if the king wishes silver vessels to be made
for the uses of the house of God, or for the service of his own palace,
or perchance money for beyond seas, it may be made from this.
D. There is something in what thou hast said that strikes me.
M. Speak then.
D. Thou said'st, if I remember rightly, that sometimes money is
brought to be paid into the exchequer which is judged unfit to be
received, if, indeed, being, weighed against a pound weight of the
exchequer, a deficiency is found of more than six pence. Inasmuch, then,
as all money of this kingdom ought to have the stamped image of the
king, and all moneyers are bound to work,- accord-[29]ing to the same
weight, bow can it happen that all their work is not of one weight?
M. That is a great question which thou askest, and one which requires
further investigation; but it can happen through forgers and clippers or
cutters of coin. Thou knowest, moreover, that the money of England can
be found false in three ways: false, namely, in weight, false in
quality, false in the stamping. But these kinds of falsification are not
visited by an equal punishment. But of this elsewhere.
D If it please thee, continue concerning the offices as thou
hast begun.
M. It is the duty of the usher to exclude or admit as is
necessary, and to be diligent in guarding every thing which is shut in
by the door; wherefore, as door-money, he shall have two pence from each
writ of exit. He furnishes the boxes to put the money in, and the rolls
and the tallies, and the other things which become necessary during the
year; and for each box be has two pence. He furnishes the whole Receipt
with wood suitable for the tallies of receipts and of accounts, and
once, that is at the Michaelmas term, be receives five shillings for the
wood of the tallies. He furnishes the wooden receptacles, the knives,
the compartments, and the straps and the other minute necessaries of the
fisc. At that same term are due two shillings for furnishing the ink of
the whole ear to both exchequers, and this amount, by ancient right, the
sacristan of the greater church of Westminster claims for himself. The
office of the watchman is the same there as elsewhere; most diligent
guarding, namely, at -night, chiefly of the treasure and of all those
things which are placed in the treasury building. Thus thou hast the
various offices of those who serve in the lower exchequer. And they have
fixed payments while the exchequer is in progress, that is from the day
on which they are called together, to the day on which there is a
general departure. The clerk of the treasurer who is below, has five
pence a day. The scribe of the same treasurer in the upper exchequer has
likewise five. The scribe of the chancellor, five. The two knights who
bear the keys have each eight, by reason of their knighthood. For they
claim that they are bound to [30] be ready with the necessary horses and
weapons, so that when they are sent with the treasure they may thus more
readily execute what pertains to their office. The knight-silverer has
twelve pence a day. The melter, five. The usher of the greater
exchequer, five. The four tellers, each three pence, if they are at
London; if at Winchester each one has two, since they are generally
taken from there. The watchman has one penny. For the light of each
night at the treasury one halfpenny.
D. For what reason does the usher of the treasury alone
receive no pay?
M. I do not exactly know But, however, perhaps he does not
receive any pay because he is seen to receive something as door-money,
and for furnishing the boxes and tallies ; or perchance because he seems
to serve, not the king, but the treasurer and the chamberlains in
guarding the door of their building. In this way, then, has the
arrangement of the lower exchequer or Receipt been made.
D. I have been so well satisfied in this regard that nothing
seems to be wanting. Proceed now, if it please thee, concerning the
greater exchequer.
IV. What is the competency of the Upper Exchequer, and
whence it takes its origin.
M. Although the offices of those who have seats at the greater
exchequer seem to differ in certain functions, the purpose,
nevertheless, of all the offices is the same, to look out for the king's
advantage; with due regard for equity, however, according to the fixed
laws of the exchequer. The arrangement or ordering of the latter is
confirmed by its antiquity and by the authority of the nobles who have
their seats there. It is said to have begun with the very conquest of
the kingdom made by king William, the arrangement being taken, however,
from the exchequer across the seas; but they differ in very many and
almost the most important points. Some believe it to have existed under
the Anglo-Saxon kings, taking their argument in this matter from the
fact that the peasants and already decrepit old men of those estates
which are called [31] knew very well, having been taught by their
fathers, how of the crown, whose memory is gray in these matters, much
extra money they are bound to pay on the pound for the blanching of
their farm. But this argument applies to the payment of the farm, not to
the session of the exchequer. The fact also seems to be against those
who say that the blanching of the farm began in the time of the
Anglo-Saxon kings, that in the Domesday book, in which a diligent
description of the whole kingdom is contained, and in which, the value
is expressed of the different estates as well of the time of king Edward
as of the time of king William, under whom it was made,-there is no
mention at all of the blanching of the farm: from which it seems
probable that, after the time when that survey was made in the reign of
the aforementioned king, the blanching of the farm was fixed upon by his
investigators on account of causes which are noted below. But at
whatever time it came into use, it is certain that the exchequer is
confirmed by the authority of the great, so that it is allowed to no one
to infringe its statutes or to resist them by any kind of rashness. For
it has this in common with the Court itself of the lord king (Curia
Regis), in which he in his own person administers the law, that no one
is allowed to contradict a record or a sentence passed in it. The
authority, moreover, of this court is so great, as well on account of
the preeminence of the royal image, which, by a special prerogative, is
kept on his seal of the treasury, as on account of those who have their
seats there, as has been said; by whose watchfulness the condition of
the whole kingdom is kept safe. For there sits the Chief Justice of the
lord king by reason of his judicial dignity, as well as the greatest men
of the kingdom, who share familiarly in the royal secrets; so that
whatever has been established or determined in the presence of such
great men subsists by an inviolable right. In the first place, there
sits, nay also presides, by reason of his office, the first man in the
kingdom, namely, the Chief Justice. With him sit, solely by command of
the sovereign, with momentary and varying authority, indeed, certain of
the greatest and most discreet men in the kingdom, who may belong either
to the clergy [32]- or to the court. They sit there, I say, to interpret
the law and to decide upon the doubtful points which frequently arise
from incidental questions. For not in its reckonings, but in its
manifold judgments, does the superior science of the exchequer consist.
For it is easy when the sum required has been put down, and the sums
which have been handed in are placed under it for comparison, to tell by
subtraction if the demands have been satisfied or if anything remains.
But when one begins to make a many-sided investigation of those things
which come into the fisc in varying ways, and are required under
different conditions, and are not collected by he sheriffs in the same
way,-to be able to tell if the latter have acted otherwise than they
should, is in many ways a grave task. Therefore the greater science of
the exchequer is said to consist in these matters. But the judgments on
doubtful or doubted points which frequently come up can not be
comprehended under one form of treatment; for all kinds of doubts have
not yet come to light. Certain, however, of the matters which we know to
have been brought up and settled, we shall note below in their proper
place.
V. What is the office of the President, and of all those who sit
there officially; and what the arrangement of the Seats.
D. What is the office of this so important a member?
M. Nothing can be more truly said of him than that he looks after all
things in the lower and upper exchequer, and all the lower offices are
arranged according to his will; in such wise, however, that they duly
turn out to the advantage of the lord king. In this, moreover, among
other things, his exalted character is seen,-that he, under his own
witness, can cause a writ of the lord king to be made out so that an ' y
sum may be delivered from the treasury, or that there may be computed to
any one, whatever he knows ought, by command of the king, to be computed
to him. Or, if he prefer, he can make his own writ, witnessed to by
others, concerning these matters.
D. Great is this man to whose fidelity the care of the whole kingdom,
nay, the very heart of the king is entrusted. [33] For indeed, it is
written: "where your treasure is, there will your heart be also." But
now, if it please thee, continue concerning the others.
M. Dost thou wish me to proceed with them according to the grade of
their dignities, or according to the disposition of the seats?
D. According as each one, by reason of his office, has attained his
seat. For it will be easy, I imagine, to conclude the dignities from the
offices.
M. That thou may'st understand in what order they are arranged, know
that at the four sides of the exchequer four me seats or benches are
placed. But at the head of the exchequer-that is, where the broad side
is,-in the middle, not of the seat, but of the exchequer, is the place
of that chief man of whom we spoke above. In the first place on big left
sits, by reason of his office, the chancellor, if he should happen to be
present; after him the knight whom e call constable: after him, two
chamberlains, he being first who, judging from his more advanced age, is
the more venerable: after these, the knight who is commonly called the
marshal. In the absence of these, others, however, are sometimes put in
their place; or perchance even when they are present, if, namely, the
authority of those who are delegated by the king shall be so great that
the others ought to give place to them. Such is the arrangement of the
first bench. In the second, moreover, which is on the long side of the
exchequer, sits, in the place at the head, the clerk or another servant
of the chamberlains, with the "recauta," - that is, with the
counter-tallies from the Receipt. After him, some coming in between who
do not sit there by reason of their office but are delegated by the
king, is a place almost in the middle of the side of the exchequer for
him who puts down the sums by the placing of counter. After him some,
not by reason of their office, but nevertheless necessary. At the end of
that bench sits the clerk who presides over the scriptorium, and he by
reason of his office. Thus thou hast the arrangement of the second
bench. But at the right of the presiding Justice sits in the first place
the now Bishop of Winchester, the former arch-dean of Poitiers,-not,
indeed, by reason of his office, but by a new decree; in order, namely,
that he may [34] be next to the treasurer and may diligently give his
attention to the writing of the roll. After him, at the head of the
third seat, on the right, sits the treasurer, who has to attend most
carefully to everything which is done there, being bound to give an
account, as it were, of all these things, if there shall be need of it.
After him sits his ,dark, the scribe of the roll of the treasury - after
him, another scribe, of the roll of the chancery: after him, the clerk
of the chancellor, who with his own eyes always sees to it that his roll
corresponds to the other in every point, so that not one jot is lacking
and that the order of writing does not differ: after him, almost at the
end of that bench sits the clerk of the constable, great, indeed, and
busy at the court of the lord king, and having, indeed, here au office
which be performs in person or, if the king shall seem to have more use
for him elsewhere, through a discreet clerk. This, then, is the
description of the third bench. On the fourth bench, which is opposite
the Justice, Master Thomas, who is called Brunus, sits at the head with
a third roll which has been added as a new institution, that is, by our
lord king; for it is written, " and a threefold cord is not quickly
broken." After him the sheriffs and their clerks., who sit there to
render account with tallies and other necessaries. This then is the
arrangement of the fourth bench.
D. Has then the scribe of Master Thomas his seat in the same range
with the other scribes, and not rather above the others ?
M. He does indeed have his seat not with the others but above the
others.
D. Why is this so?
M. Inasmuch as, from the beginning, the seats were so arranged that
the scribe of the treasurer should sit at his side lest anything should
be written which should escape his eye; and in like manner the scribe of
the chancery at the side of the scribe of the treasurer, that he might
faith. fully take, down what the latter wrote; and likewise the clerk of
the chancery was of necessity next to that scribe, lest he might err:
there was no place left in the order of the bench where Master Thomas's
scribe might sit, but a raised place was given him that be might be
above and [35] overlook the scribe of the treasurer, who is the first to
write, and may take down from him what is necessary.
D. He would need to have the eyes of a lynx so as not err; for an
error in these things is said to be dangerous.
M. Although, on account of being far off, he sometimes makes a
mistake, yet, when the rolls are corrected, a comparison being made of
all three, it will be easy to correct the mistakes.
D. Enough has thus far been said concerning the order of seating. Now
proceed, if it please thee, concerning their offices, beginning on the
left of the president
As to the Chancellor.
M. In that order the chancellor is first; and as in the court,
even so is he great at the exchequer ; so that without his consent and
advice nothing great is done or may be done. But this is his office when
he sits at the exchequer: to him pertains the custody of the royal seal
which is in the treasury, but he does not leave there except when, by
order of the Justice, it is borne by the treasurer or chamberlain from
the lower to the upper exchequer, for the sole purpose of carrying on
the business of the exchequer. This having been performed, it is put in
its box and the box is sealed by the chancellor and is given thus to the
treasurer to be guarded. Likewise, when it becomes necessary, it is
proffered sealed to the chancellor before the eyes of all; it is never
to be proffered, by him or by another, in any other way. Likewise to
him, through a substitute, pertains the custody of the roll of the
chancery; and, since it so seemed good to great men, the chancellor is
equally responsible, with the treasurer for all the writing on the roll,
except alone what has been written down as having been received in the
treasury: for although he may not prescribe how the treasurer writes,
nevertheless, if the latter shall have erred, it is allowed to him or to
his clerk with modesty to chide the treasurer and suggest what he shall
do. But if the treasurer persevere, and be unwilling to change, being
himself confident,-the chancellor can accuse him, but only before the
barons, so that by there shall be declared what ought to be done [36]
D. It seems probable that the guardian of the third roll,
also, is bound by the same responsibility as to the writing.
M. It is not only probable but true: for those two rolls have an
equal authority in the matter of the writing; for so it pleased the
originator.
As to the Constable.
The office of the constable at the exchequer is, in the case of royal
writs concerning the issue of treasure or concerning any accountings to
be made, to be witness, together with the president, for those who make
the account. For in all such writs it is necessary, according to ancient
custom, that two witnesses shall be inscribed. It is likewise his
office, when the king's soldiers come to the exchequer for their pay,
whether they reside in the castles of the king or not, taking with him
the clerk of the constabulary,-whose duty it is to know their terms of
payment-and the Marshall of the exchequer,-to compute their payments and
to take their oath concerning arrears, and to cause the rest to be paid.
For every payment of all persons whatever, whether of hawkers, or
falconers, or bear-wardens, pertains to his office if he be present;
unless, perchance, the lord king shall have previously assigned some one
else to this duty: for the constable cannot easily be torn from the
king, on account of greater and more urgent business. It is to be noted
that the Marshall of the exchequer takes from the payments of native
knights what belongs to him by reason of his office; not however from
alien ones. It is likewise common to him with the other greater barons,
that no great measure shall be taken without consulting him.
As to the Chamberlains.
The office of the chamberlains is akin to the office of the
treasurer, for they are known to serve under one and the same mantle of
honour or loss; and they have one will with regard to the king's honour;
so that what has been done by one may not be declared invalid by any of
them. [37] For the treasurer receives the accounts for himself and for
them; and, according, to the qualities of the items, furnishes the
wording for the writing of the roll; in all of which things they are
bound by an equal bond of union. And it is the same with regard I to all
other things which are done by him or by them-saving their fealty to the
king-whether in the matter of writing, of receipts, of tallies or of
expenses.
As to the Marshal.
It is the duty of the marshal to put aside in his box the tallies of
the debtors which the sheriff hands in, which, all the same, are put
clown on the roll; also the writs of the king concerning the computing
or remitting or giving of those things which are demanded of the sheriff
through the summons. On that box is placed the name of the County to
which these belong, and it is necessary that, for the separate counties,
separate boxes should be furnished to the marshal by the sheriff who
renders his account.
D. There is something here that troubles me.
M. I quite foresaw it. But wait a little. Everything will be
plain from what follows. Likewise if any debtor, not giving satisfaction
for the amount of his summons, shall have deserved to be siezed, he is
handed over to the marshal to be guarded, and when the exchequer of that
day is dissolved, the latter shall, if he wish, send him to public jail;
he shall not, however, be chained or thrust into the dungeon, but shall
be apart by himself or above the subterraneous jail. For although he be
not solvent, he has not, nevertheless, on this account deserved to be
put with the criminals; that is, provided he is not a knight for
concerning knights held for debt there is an illustrious decree of the
king which will be noticed below in treating of the sheriff. It is
likewise the marshal's concern, when the account of the sheriff, or
administrator, or whatever person sits to render account, is finished,
to take an a oath from him in public to the effect that, upon his
conscience, he has rendered a true account. But if the sheriff, or he
who has accounted, is bound by any debt he shall add that he will not
depart from, the exchequer, that [38] is, from the banlieu of the town
in which it is, without permission of the barons, unless he is going to
return on the same day. Likewise the -marshal shall receive, numbered,
the writs of summons made out against the term fixed for the next
exchequer, sealed with the royal seal; and shall distribute them with
his own hand to the usher of the upper exchequer to be carried
throughout England. Thus thou hast the different offices of those who
sit on the first bench.
As to the Maker of Tallies.
Now at the head of the second seat the serjeant of the chamberlains
comes first, a clerk or a layman, whose office can briefly be disposed
of ; in word, however, not in deed. He brings forth from the treasury
the tallies against the sheriff or against him who renders account; and,
when it is necessary,, according as the manner of accounting demands, be
changes or diminishes or adds to the tally, comparing it with the
counter tally of the sheriff. This having been done at the Easter term,
he gives back the longer one to the sheriff to bring again at the
Michaelmas term. But at the Michaelmas term, when the amount of it shall
have been put down in writing in the roll, he hands this same longer one
to the marshal to put in his box.
D. I wonder at thy saying that a tally once offered for an
account, should again be offered for another account.
M. Do -not wonder; for with regard to whatever has been
exacted, or paid by the sheriff at the Easter term, he must again be
summoned; not, indeed, in order that what has been paid should be paid
again, but that the sheriffs shall present themselves to give account,
and that the tally offered for the payment previously made ma be reduced
to writing in the roll, and that thus he may be absolved from his debt.
For so long as be has the tally in his possession, he will not be
acquitted but will always be liable to be summoned.
D. And all this seems necessary. But proceed, if it Please
thee, concerning the offices.
M. Nay, since we have made mention of tallies, learn in a few words
what the process is in which the matter of [39] tallying consists. There
is, then, one kind of tally which is called simply tally; another, which
we call memoranda tally. The length of an ordinary tally is from the top
of the forefinger to the top of the extended thumb; there it is
perforated with a moderate borer. But a memoranda which is always
accustomed to be made for a blank farm is a little shorter; for when the
assay is made through which the farm is blanched, that first one is
broken, and the tally of combustion being added to it, it then first
merits the length of a tally. The incision, moreover, is made in this
way : At the top they out £1000 in such as way that its notch has the
thickness of the palm; £100 of the thumb; £20 of the ear; the notch of
one pound, about of a swelling grain of barley; but that of a shilling,
less ; in such wise, nevertheless, that, a space being cleared out by
cutting, a moderate furrow shall be made there; the penny is marked by
the incision being made, but no wood being cut away. On the side where
the 1000 is cut thou dost not put another number, unless, perhaps, the
middle part of it; in such wise that thou in like manner dost take away
the middle part of its notch and dost place it below. [Note: The
meaning of this passage is obscure. The Latin reads: " Ex qua vero parte
millenarius inciditur, alium non pones numeram; -nisi forte mediam ejus
partem; sic ut mediam similiter incisionis ejus domas, et infra
constituas."] Just so if £100 is to be cut in, and thou hast
thousands, thou shalt do the same; and if £210, the same; and if 20
shillings, which we call a pound. But if many thousands or hundreds or
twenties of pounds are to be cut in, the same law shall be observed, so
that on the more open side of the tally, that is, that which is placed
directly before thee, a mark being made, the greater number shall be
cut; but on the other, the lesser; but on the obverse side, is always
the greater -number at the top, but on the converse always the lesser,
that is, the pence. For a mark of silver there is no special notch at
the exchequer, but we designate it in shillings. But a mark of gold thou
dost cut in the middle of the tally as though it were one pound. But one
gold piece is not cut altogether like a silver piece, but by drawing the
knife directly through the middle of the tally; -not obliquely, as in
the case of [40] the silver piece. Thus, therefore, both, the
arrangement of the positions and the difference of cut, determines what
is gold and what is silver. But thou shalt learn all this more
conveniently by looking at it than by hearing of it.
D. What remains of this will be made clear by ocular
demonstration. Now, if it please thee, proceed concerning the offices.
M. After him, as we said above, a few discreet men who are
delegated by the king coming in between, sits he who, by command of the
king makes computations by the placing of coins used as counters. This
office indeed is perplexing and laborious enough; and, without it,
seldom or never could the business of the exchequer be carried on; but
it belongs officially to none of those who sit there, but to him' to
whom the king or the Justice shall give it to fill. Laborious, I say,
for other offices are filled by the tongue or the hand, this by both; in
it "the hand, the tongue and the eye, and the mind are unwearied in
labour."
As to the Calculator.
This is his business: according to the usual course of the exchequer,
not according to arithmetical laws. Thou wilt remember, I presume, my
saying that on the exchequer was placed a cloth divided by stripes, in
the spaces of which heaps of cash are placed. Now the calculator sits in
the middle of the side, that he may be visible to all, and that his busy
hand may have free course. He has placed already at his right hand, in
the lower space, a heap of pennies from 11 down; in the second, of
shillings from- 19 down; but in the third, of pounds. And this heap,
indeed, ought to be opposite and directly facing him, for in the
ordinary accounts of the sheriff it is the medium; in the fourth is the
heap of the twenties;. in the fifth, of the hundreds; in the sixth, of
the thousands; in the seventh, but rarely, of the ten thousands of
pounds; rarely, I say, that is when, through the king or his mandate,
the account for the receipts of the whole-kingdom is received by the
nobles of the kingdom from the treasurer and the chamberlains. Moreover,
it is lawful for the calculator to put [41] silver piece in place of ten
shillings, or a gold obol in place of ten pounds, so that the account
may be more quickly made. He must take care, however, lest his too hasty
hand proceed before his tongue, or the reverse; but at the same time
that he counts he shall place the counter and designate the number, lest
there be an error in the number. The sum, therefore, which is required
from the sheriff being arranged in heaps, those sums which. have been
paid in, either to the treasury or otherwise, are arranged below,
likewise in heaps. But if it be a farm by tale which is required of him,
or any other debt which can be satisfied by tale only, there shall
simply be made a deduction of the lower from the upper sum, and he shall
be bounden for the rest; it shall be done otherwise, however, he be
about to pay a blank farm; as will be shown more fully when we treat of
the sheriff's business:
D. Spare a moment thy running pen that I may be allowed to say a few
words.
M. It is thy turn to throw the die, nor may speech be denied
thee.
D. It seems to me as if I were given to understand that, by
means of calculation, the same coin being placed for a counter shall
signify now a penny, now a shilling, now a pound, now a hundred, now a
thousand.
M. So it is, but only, however, if it is placed with coins
corresponding to those. values; or, if it is taken away from them, it
can, at the pleasure of the calculator, be brought about that the one
which signifies a thousand by gradually descending, shall signify one.
D. Thus it happens when one of the people, since he is a man and can
not be any thing else, ascends from the depths to the summit, temporal
benefits being bestowed on him by the will of the President; and then,
according to Fortuna's law, is thrust back into the depths, remaining
what he was although he seemed by reason of his dignity and standing, to
have been changed from himself.
M. Know that thy words do not apply in all respects. But, however it
way seem to others, I am well pleased that from these matters thou dost
infer others; indeed it is praiseworthy to seek the flowers of mystic
meaning in the winnowings of mundane affairs. And not alone [42] in
these things that thou dost mention, but in the whole description of the
exchequer there are hiding places, as it were, of holy truths. For the
diversity of officials, the authority of the judicial power, the
impression of the royal image, the sending out of summonses, the writing
of the rolls, the account of land rents, the exaction of debts, the
condemnation or absolution of the accused, are a symbol of the strict
examination that will be made when the books of all shall be opened and
the gates closed. But so much for these things. Now let us proceed
concerning the offices; after him who has charge of the counters, first,
by reason of his office, sits the clerk who presides over the
scriptorium of the king.
As to the Clerk who presides over the scriptorium.
To him it pertains to find suitable scribes for the roll of the
chancery, and for the writs of the king which are made in the exchequer,
also for writing summonses; and to see to it that they are well done:
which offices, although they are expressed in a few words, can scarcely
be fulfilled even with infinite pains; as those know who have learnt by
experience in such matters. Thus thou hast the offices of those who are
placed on the second bench.
As to the Archdean of Poitiers, now Bishop of
Winchester.'[i.e. Richard of Ilchester[
D. If I remember well, first at the right of the president sits the
Bishop of Winchester, whose office at the exchequer I should like
straightway to find out. For he is great and ought not to be busied save
with great things.
M. He is great, without doubt; and, intent on great things, he
is drawn in many directions, as is more fully shown in the Tricolumnis.
He, before the time of his promotion, when he was serving a little lower
in the court of the king (Curia Regis), seemed, by reason of his
fidelity and industry, necessary to the business of the king, and very
ready and officious in computations and in the writing of [43] rolls and
writs. Wherefore the place was given him at the side of the treasurer,
so that with the latter, indeed, he might attend to the writing of the
rolls and to all of these things. The treasurer, indeed, is distracted
by so many and such great cares and solicitudes for all things, that
necessarily at times slumber creeps over such great labours. For in
human affairs hardly anything is entirely perfect.
D. What dost thou say ? For I do not even know what the Tricolumnis
is.
M. It is a book, indeed, composed by us although in the time of our
youth, concerning the three-fold history of the kingdom of England,
under the illustrious king of the English, Henry the Second. And this,
because we have treated it all through in three columns, we have called
the Tricolumnis. In the first, indeed, we have treated of many matters
concerning the English church, and of some rescripts of the apostolic
see. But in the second, of the distinguished deeds of the aforesaid
king, which exceed human belief. But in the third any public as well as
private matters are treated of, and also sentences of the court. If this
by chance should fall into thy hands, see that it do not escape thee;
for it may be useful in future times and entertaining to those who shall
be interested in the state of the kingdom under the aforesaid prince.
For although this king is descended from ancestral kings, and has spread
his kingdom with triumphant victory throughout long spaces of land: it
is nevertheless a great thing, that, by his mighty deeds, he has
surpassed the title of fame so prodigal towards him. But enough of this.
Now let us continue t be matter begun.
D. So be it, if it so please thee. It may be that due reverence for
the treasurer is observed : here it seems derogatory to his dignity that
in all things his sole faith is not trusted.
M. God forbid; nay rather, in this way his labours are spared and:
indemnity is assured to him; for it is not that he or another - so many
and so great they are who sit at the exchequer - is not trusted: but
that for such great matters and affairs of the kingdom, under so great a
prince, it is fitting that great men and many of them be chosen; not
[44] however, that they may look out for their own advantage, but that
they may serve the glory and honour of the king.
D. Proceed, if it please thee, concerning the offices.
As to the Treasurer.
M. The office of the treasurer, or his care and business, could
hardly be expressed in words, even though mine were the pen of a ready
writer. For in all things, and concerning all things which are carried
on either in the lower or the upper exchequer, his careful diligence is
necessary. From what has been said before, nevertheless, it will be in
great part clear in what things his principal care consists, so that he
can not be torn from these so long as the exchequer lasts: namely, in
receiving the accounts of the sheriff, and in the writing of the roll.
For he furnishes the words, according to the nature of the matters, for
the writing of his roll,-from which afterwards that same wording is
taken by the other rolls as has been said above; and he must take care
that there be no mistake either in the number, or the cause, or the
person,-lest he be cancelled who is not quit, or he be summoned again
who ought to be acquitted. For so great is the authority of his roll
that it is permitted to no one to contradict it or to change it; unless,
perchance, there be so manifest an error that it is clear to all: nor
may it even then be changed unless by the common counsel of all the
barons, and in their presence, the exchequer of that day being still in
session. But a writing of the roll made in the year gone by, or even one
of the current year, after the exchequer has been dissolved, may
lawfully be changed by no one except the king, to whom, with regard to
these matters, every thing is lawful that pleases him. Likewise it is
the treasurer's duty to be associated in all great matters with his
superiors, and to let nothing be hidden from him.
As to the Scribe of the Treasurer.
The office of the scribe who is next to the treasurer is to prepare
the rolls for writing, from sheep-skins, not without cause. Their
length, moreover, is as much as results from two membranes; not from
random ones, but from large [45] ones, prepared with care for this
purpose: but the breadth is a little more than that of one and a 'half.
The rolls, therefore, being ruled from the top almost to the bottom, and
on both sides, the lines being suitably distant from each other, the
counties and bailiwicks of which an account is below rendered are marked
at the top: but a moderate interval being left, the space as it were of
three or four fingers, in the middle of the line is written the name of
the county which is treated of in the first place. Then at the head of
the following line is written the name of the sheriff, followed by this
form of words: "that or that sheriff renders account of the farm of that
or that county." Then a little further on in the same line is written "
in the treasury," and nothing else is added until the account is
completed, for an important reason which is explained in the chapter on
the sheriff. Then at the head of the following line is put down what
part of the farm of the county is expended in alms and in the fixed
tithes, what, also, in liveries. After these, at the head of the lower
line are noted, among the lands given away, those which the generosity
of the kings has conferred on churches or on those who did military
service for them; among the estates called crown lands, which are blank,
which by tale.
D. It surprises me, -what thou sayest, that some estates are
given blank, some by tale.
M. Let us proceed at present concerning the office of the scribe;
and, when we are treating of the sheriff, ask me concerning this if thou
wilt. After the lands given away, a space being left of one line so that
the things by their very nature may seem separate, those things are
noted which were ordered to be expended from the farm by a writ of the
king; for these are not fixed, but casual. Some also which are without
writs are accounted for as by custom of the exchequer, concerning which
we will speak later: and thus the account for the body of the county is
terminated. After this, a space being left of about six or seven lines,
an account is made of the purprestures and escheats under this form of
words: "the same sheriff renders account of the farm of purprestures and
escheats"; but also of all the farms of manors and of the rent of woods
which are annually due and paid. After [46] these the accounts are put
down in their order, excepting some cities and towns and bailiwicks of
which the accounts are greater because they have fixed alms or liveries
or lands given; and to the administrators of such lands special
summonses are sent concerning their dues to the king. Their accounts,
moreover, are made up after the account of the county in which they are
is altogether finished. Such are Lincoln, Winchester, Mienes (?),
Berchamstead, Colchester, and very many others.
D.I wonder at thy saying that some fixed revenues are called
farms, but some, rents.
M. Farms are of manors; rents, however, only of woods. For the things
that come from manors are rightly called firm and immutable, because,
through agriculture, they are every year renewed and return, and besides
this constitute in themselves sure revenues by the perpetual law of
custom. But what by a yearly law is due from woods which are daily cut
down and perish-for which there is not so firm or fixed demand, but
which are subject to rises and falls, though not yearly, yet frequent-is
called rent: and so, by elision, they say that these revenues are
rented. Some nevertheless believe that what is paid by individuals is
called rent; but a farm, what results from these rents; so that farm is
a collective name like crowd: wherefore, as is believed, it is thus
called rent to indicate a yearly, payment and show that it is not firm.
After these fixed payments, a space again being left, an account is made
of the debts concerning which the sheriff has been summoned; the names,
however, being first put down of those judges who have apportioned these
debts. But lastly an account is made of the chattels of fugitives or of
those mutilated for their offences. And all this being completed, the
account of that county is terminated. The scribe must take care not to
write anything of his own accord in the roll, except what he has learned
from the treasurer's dictation. But if, perhaps, through negligence or
any other chance he should happen to err in writing the roll, either in
the name or the amount or in the matter - in which the greater force of
the writing consists, -he shall not presume to erase, but shall cancel
by drawing, underneath, a thin line, and shall write directly following
what is necessary. For the writing of [47] the roll has this in common
with charters and other letters patent, that it may not be erased: and
for this reason care has been taken to make them of sheep-skins ; for
they do not easily yield to erasure with out the blemish becoming
apparent.
D. Does that scribe furnish the rolls at his own expense or at that
of the fisc ?
M. At the, Michaelmas term he receives five shillings from the fisc,
and the scribe of the chancery likewise another five; from which they
procure the membranes for both rolls and for the summonses and receipts
of the lower exchequer.
As to the Scribe of the Chancery.
The care, the labour, the zeal of the remaining scribe sitting at his
side consists chiefly in this, namely, that he shall take down from the
other roll word for word; as we said before, the same order being
observed. Likewise it pertains to him to write the writs of the king
concerning outlays of the treasury, but only for those payments which,
in the judgment of the barons, -while the exchequer is in session, ought
to be made by the treasurer and chamberlains: likewise he writes the
writs of the king concerning the computing or remitting of those things
which the barons have decreed should be computed or remitted at the
exchequer. It is his duty also, when the accounts of the sheriff have
been gone through, and the dues of the king for which the summonses are
made, estimated, to write out the latter, with diligent and at the same
time laborious discretion, to be sent throughout the whole kingdom: for
by them, and on account of them, the exchequer of the following term is
called together.
VI. What the tenor is of Writs of the King made at the Exchequer-,
whether concerning outlays of the Treasury, or computings or remittings.
D. Under what form of words are writs of the king concerning outlays
of the treasury drawn up?
[48]
M. The treasurer and chamberlains do not expend the money received,
unless by express mandate of the king or of the presiding justice: for
when the general account -is demanded from them, they must have the
authority of a rescript of the king concerning the money distributed;
moreover this is the wording under which they are drawn up: "H. king,
etc., to N. the treasurer and to this man and that man, chamberlains,
greeting. Pay from ray treasury to that or that man, this or this sum.
These being witnesses before N. at the exchequer." Moreover " at the
exchequer " is added that thus there may be a difference from the writs
that are made in the curia regis. It, is also necessary, when a writ is
made concerning an outlay from the treasury, as we have said, that that
same scribe shall make a copy of it, which is commonly called
counter-writ; and this the clerk of the chancery shall reserve in
his own possession, in testimony of the payment made through the
original writ of the king, which the treasurer and chamberlains have.
Also writs of computing or remitting those things which the barons shall
have decreed should be computed or remitted-the will of our lord king
having previously become known-are drawn up under this tenor of words: "
H. by the grace of God, etc., to the barons of the exchequer, greeting.
Compute to that or that man this or this sum, which he expended for this
or that affair of mine. These being witness there at the exchequer."
Likewise: " The king to the barons of the exchequer, greeting. I remit
to that man, or quit-claim to this or that one this or that. These being
witnesses there at the exchequer." Copies of all these writs shall
remain I with the aforesaid clerk, as a proof that the writs were made
out. For the original writs of computations or remissions are enclosed
in the boxes of the marshall when the accounts of the sheriffs are made
up; for the rest, unless a dispute arise concerning them, they are not
to be shown. Moreover, what we have said of the writs of the king is
likewise to be understood of the writs of the presiding justice; but
only when the king is absent and, with the impress of his seal, the laws
of the kingdom are established and the cases are called, so that the who
are summoned before the court are condemned or acquitted. But [49]so
long as the king shall be in the kingdom of England, the writs of the
exchequer shall be made in the royal name, under the witness of this
same president and of some other magnate. What the tenor is, moreover,
of those writs which are called summonses, will be more fully told below
in the chapter on summonses.
As to the Clerk of the Chancellor.
The clerk of the chancellor, who is next to the latter, although he
serves not in his own but in another's name, is nevertheless, busied
about great things, and is called in many directions: so that from the
very beginning of the accounts to the end he can not be torn thence;
unless perchance he is lenient to himself, a discreet representative
meanwhile being substituted for him. He has the first care after the
treasurer in all these things which are done there; principally,
however, in the matter of writing the rolls and writs; for in these
things he is chiefly versed. And he looks out lest the pen of his
scribe, while he follows the other with equal steps, should commit an
error. Likewise he looks diligently at the roll of the former year
placed before him, until satisfaction shall have been given by the
sheriff for those debts which are there marked, and for which he is
summoned. Likewise when the sheriff sits to render account, the fixed
payments from the county having been computed and put in writing, he
takes from the writ of summons to which the king's seal is appended
presses the sheriff for those debts which are there written down,
speaking in public and saying; "render much; and for that, so much." The
debts, moreover, which are paid entirely, and for which satisfaction is
given, the same clerk cancels by a line drawn through the middle; so
that there may thus be a distinction between what is paid and what is to
be paid. He also guards the counter-writs of those drawn up at the
exchequer: He also corrects and seals the summonses made, as been said
before; and he has infinite labour and is the greatest after the
treasurer.
D. Here Argus would be more useful than Polyphemus.
[50]
As to the Clerk of the Constabulary.
M. The clerk of the constabulary is great, and busied at the curia
regis; at the exchequer also he is called in, together with the magnates
to all the most important affairs, and with his consent matters
concerning the king are carried on. He is, moreover, sent by the king to
the exchequer with the counter-writs against the terms of the exchequer,
but only concerning those things which are done at the curia. He also,
with the constable, sees to the payments of the knights, or of certain
of them as hag been said; and at times his office is laborious enough,
although it is expressed in few words. Nevertheless he fills it very
often through a substitute as does the chancellor; for the higher
officials can not easily absent themselves from the presence of the
king. Thus thou hast, to some extent, the distribution of offices of
those placed on the third bench at the right of the president.
As to Brunus.
Now at the head of the fourth seat which is placed opposite the
justices sits Master Thomas, called Brunus. His authority at the
exchequer is not to be despised. For it is a great and mighty proof of
his faithfulness and discretion that he was chosen by a prince of such
excellent talents to have, contrary to the ancient custom, a third roll
in which he may write the prerogatives of the realm and the secrets of
the king, and which, keeping it in his own charge, he may carry wherever
he wishes. He also has big clerk in the lower exchequer, who, sitting
next to the clerk of the treasury, has free opportunity to write what is
received and expended in the treasury.
D. Is, then, his faith and -discretion so well known to the
king that, for this work, no one else is considered equal to him in
merit?
M. He was great at the court of the great king of Sicily,
provident in his counsels, and almost first in the privy council of the
king. Meanwhile a new king arose who ignored him, one who, having evil
men around him, [51] persecuted his father in the persons of the
latter's adherents. That man, therefore, his good fortune having
changed, was compelled to flee for his life, and although access was
open to him with the greatest honour to very many kingdoms,
nevertheless, being frequently invited by Henry the illustrious king of
the English, whose fame is less than the truth itself, he preferred to
go to his native soil and to his hereditary and incomparable master.
Being received therefore by him as befitted both, because in Sicily he
had been concerned with great matters, here also he is deputed to the
great affairs of the exchequer. Thus, therefore, he gained an abiding
place and an office of dignity. He is called in, also, with the magnates
to all the great matters of the exchequer.
The above, then, are the different prerogatives of all those who, by
reason of their office, sit at the greater exchequer. it is -next in
order, if I mistake not, that we proceed to tell what their dignities
are by of their sitting at the exchequer.
D. Nay, if it please thee, the office is still to be explained
of the knight whom thou dost call the silverer and also the office of
the melter; for they have been put off thus far since they are akin to
each other and pertain to the :greater exchequer.
M. I see that the memory of the things promised does got escape thee,
whence the sure hope is conceived that forgetfulness will not defraud
thee of what I have already said. I thought, indeed, that I had
satisfied thee concerning the offices because I had omitted no one of
those who have seats at the exchequer. But those of whom thou dost
remind me have not fixed seats allotted them; nay, they fulfil their
office according to- the command of the president or treasurer.
As to the Knight Silverer.
The knight silverer, then, carries from the lower to the upper
exchequer the box of money to be tested, of which 'We spoke above; when
he has brought this in, signed with the seal of the sheriff, he pours
out in the exchequer, under the eyes of all, forty four shillings,
which, when be took them from the heap, he b al previously marked ; and
[52] mixing them together so that they may correspond in weight, he puts
in one scale of the balance a pound weight, in the other as many of the
coins as shall be necessary; this being done, he counts them, so that it
may be evident from the number if they are of legal weight. But of
whatever weight they are found to be, he puts apart into a cup one that
is, twenty shillings, of which a test shall be made; but the remaining
twenty four shillings he puts into a box. Likewise, besides the X
to be tested, two pence are given to the melter, not from the fisc, but
on the part of the sheriff ; as a reward, so to speak, for his labour.
Then there are chosen by the president, or, if he be absent, by the
treasurer, two other sheriffs ; so that they, together with the knight
silverer and also the sheriff against whom the test is to be made, shall
proceed to the fire; there the melter, warned before and having made the
necessary preparations, awaits their coming. There again, in the
presence of the melter and of those who have been sent by the barons,
they are diligently counted and banded over to the melter.
As to the Melter.
He, receiving them, counts them with his own hand, and thus places
them on a vessel of burning embers which is in the furnace. Then,
therefore, obeying the law of the art of inciting, be reduces them to a
mass, blowing upon, and cleansing, the silver. But he must take care
lest it stand longer than necessary, or lest by excessive boilings he
trouble and consume it ; the former on account of the risk of loss to
the king; the latter, to the sheriff; but he shall in every way, with
all the industry possible, provide and procure that it be not troubled,
but that it be boiled only so as to be pure. Those, moreover, who are
sent there by the greater officials, should also see to this same thing.
When the test, then, has been made, the others accompanying, the knight
silverer carries the silver to the barons; and then, before the eyes of
all, he weighs it with the aforesaid pound weight. Moreover he then
supplies what the fire has consumed, putting in coin out of that same
box, until that which has been tested is in equilibrium with the weight;
then the result of that test is inscribed [53] with these words:
"Yorkshire. The pound burnt with so and so many pence loss "; and then
that is called an assay; for it is not inscribed unless it be previously
agreed that it ought to stand that way. But if the sheriff from whom it
comes shall claim that more has been consumed than is just - by the heat
of the fire, perhaps, or by the infusion of lead; or if the melter
himself shall confess that, for some reason or other, the test was
imperfect ; - again twenty shillings - those which remain in the
aforesaid box - shall be counted before the barons, as has been
described; so that, the same process being observed, a test may be made
of them. Hence it must be clear to thee for what reason, from the great
heap of money placed there originally, forty four shillings are, from
the first, put aside in a box, on which is placed the seal of the
sheriff. It is to be noted, indeed, that the melter receives two pence
for the testing, as has been said. But if, by any chance, he should go
through it again-or even if he test it a third time - he shall not
receive anything, but shall be content the two pence which he has once
received.
D. I wonder that by such great men such diligence should be applied
to the testing of one pound, since neither great gain nor much loss can
come from it.
M. This is gone through with not on account of this pound alone, but
on account of all those which, together with this, are paid by the same
sheriff under the name of same farm. For as much as, through the purging
fire, falls off from this pound, so much the sheriff knows is to be
subtracted from each other pound of his sum: so that if he pays a
hundred pounds by tale, and twelve pence be fallen off the test pound,
only ninety five are computed to him.
D. Now I seem to see that, from these things, no small gain can
arise; but to whom it ought to go I am ignorant.
M. It has been said, and it is always meant, that advantage the of
the king alone is served in all these matters. Although, moreover, the
combustion is subtracted from the of the sheriff, it is nevertheless
placed apart on another , shorter tally, so that the treasurer and
chamberlains may answer for the total of it. But thou must known that,
through this tally of combustion the farm of [54] the sheriff is
blanched; wherefore, in testimony of this, it always remains hanging to
the greater tally.
D. A question strikes me here which I remember to have
propounded when we were treating of the lower exchequer: why, namely,
one pound should fall off more than another, since the condition ought
to be the same of all those who have to do with coining money.
M. To this question, as to that former one, it is sufficient to reply
that this can be done through forgers and clippers of coin. Some,
moreover, have believed-and I do not differ from them-that the money of
this kingdom was not lawful if the tested pound decreased more than six
pence from the weight to which it corresponds when counted; and also
that money of this kind, brought to the exchequer, ought to fall to the
fisc, - unless, perhaps, the coins are new and not customary, and the
inscription upon them betrays their producer; for then that moneyer
shall be strictly called to account for his work, and, according to the
established laws, shall be condemned or absolved without loss to the
sheriff. But if, the coin being proved and re-proved by testing, the
moneyer shall have been condemned and punished, the coins shall be
reduced to a mass by the melter- of the exchequer-others skilled in this
art being present-and its weight shall be computed to the sheriff. But
all this is almost abolished now and much relaxed; since, with regard to
money, all sin in common; when, however, the money shall come to be of
the right measure, and the one fixed by law, it will become necessary to
keep the law as originally established. On the other hand, if any
sheriff should have brought coins, a pound of which, when burned, kept
within five or four or less, and they seemed to have been newly made,
not usual or current, they were likewise called not lawful: exceeding,
as it were, the common standard; whence, like the others, they also
could be confiscated.
There are likewise at the exchequer fixed payments which are made at
stated terms without a writ of the king: such is the salary of the "
nauclerus," i.e., the master, of the king's ship which we call
"esnecca," who receives twelve pence daily. For this, and for similar
payments, tallies are made by the chamberlains, since they do not [55]
have writs for them. The knight silverer, moreover, has the "recauta "
of these, i.e., the counter-tallies. Likewise he and the melter - when
it becomes necessary, and the great quantity of money brought in burdens
the tellers - may, on being requested by the chamberlains, aid them in
counting; it is, however, optional on their parts, not compulsory. Thus
thou hast the offices of the knight silverer the melter.
D. What are the signs of a test completed or of one not completed
M. I do not sufficiently know; nor have I troubled myself
about these things. But so long as over the already 1iquid silver a sort
of little black cloud is seen to hover, it is called incomplete. But
when, as it were, certain minute grains ascend from the bottom to the
top and there dissolve, it is a sign that the test is done.
VII. By whom, or for what purpose, the testing of silver was
instituted.
D. By whom, and on what account, was this testing or
combustion instituted ?
M. In order that it may be clear to thee concerning these things, I
must begin a little further back. In the primitive state of the kingdom
after the Conquest, as we have learned from our fathers, not weights of
gold or but solely victuals were paid to the kings from their lands;
from which the necessaries for the daily use of the royal household were
furnished. And those who had been appointed for this purpose knew how
much came from the separate estates. But from the pleas of the kingdom
and from feudal reliefs, and from the cities or castles by which
agriculture was not practised, cash money for the stipends or gifts of
the soldiers, and for other necessary things came in. This arrangement,
however, continued during the whole time of king William I., and up to
the time of king Henry, his son; so that I myself saw some people who
had seen victuals carried at stated times from the estates of the crown
to the court: and the officials of the royal household knew from which
counties corn and from which different kinds of meat, or fodder for
horses, [56] or any other necessary things, were due. These being paid
according to the measure fixed upon of each thing, the royal officials
put them to the account of the sheriff, reducing them to a total of
money: for a measure, namely, of grain enough for the bread of a hundred
men, one shilling; for the body of a fattened ox, one shilling; for a
ram or a sheep, 4d. ; for the fodder of twenty horses, likewise 4d.
But as time went on, when the same king was occupied across the channel
and in remote places, in calming the tumults of war, it came about that
the sum necessary for meeting these expenses was paid in ready money.
Meanwhile there kept coming to the court of the king a complaining
multitude of peasants; or, what seemed to him worse, they frequently
came in front of him as he passed, proffering their ploughs as a sign of
the defective agriculture; for they were oppressed by innumerable
burdens oil account of the victuals, which, having to traverse great
distances in the realm, they brought from their lands. Yielding,
therefore, to their complaints, the opinion of the nobles having been
ascertained, he sent out throughout the kingdom the men most prudent and
discreet in these matters. These, going around and examining with their
own eyes the different estates, and estimating the victuals that were
paid from them, reduced them to a sum of money. They decreed, moreover,
that for the sum of the sums which was arrived at from all the estates
in one county, the sheriff of that county should be bounden to the
exchequer; adding that he should pay by scale, - that is, besides each
cash pound, 6d. For they thought that, in course of time, it might
easily come about that money, then good, might fall from its condition.
Nor did their opinion prove false. Therefore they were compelled to
decree that the farm of manors should be paid, not alone by scale but by
weight; which could not be done without adding a great deal. This rule
of payment was observed for many years in the exchequer: whence,
frequently, in the old yearly rolls of that king, thou wilt find
written: "in the treasury 100 pounds according to scale," or, " in the
treasury 100 pounds according to weight." Meanwhile there came into
prominence a prudent man, provident in [57] plans, discreet in
discourse, and, by the grace of God, most remarkably adapted especially
for great matters; thou would'st say that in him was fulfilled what is
written, "the grace of the Holy Spirit knows no tardy delays." He being
called to court by this same king, although unknown, yet not ignoble,
taught by his example,
How poverty, e'en when extreme, can be most fruitful of heroes!
[Note: This is a play upon words. The name of the distinguished
man in question was Roger the Poor (le Poer). He was the grand uncle of
the author of this present treatise.]
He therefore increasing in favour with his prince, with and with the
clergy, and with people, being made bishop of Salisbury, enjoyed the
highest honours in the kingdom, and had great knowledge of the
exchequer; so that, as is not doubtful, but is manifest from the rolls
themselves, it flourished greatly under him. And from his troughs we,
also, have received by tradition that little which we possess. Upon this
point, at present, I omit to say much; because, as was due to the
greatness of his position he left a memory to survive him which gives
proof of a most noble, mind. He afterwards, by order of the prince, came
to the exchequer; and after having sat there for some years, he learned
that by the kind of payment described above the fisc did not fully get
its dues: for although it seemed to get its dues in number and weight,
it did not, nevertheless, in material. For it did not follow, when for
one pound be paid twenty shillings in cash, even if they corresponded to
a pound in weight, that he consequently paid a pound of silver: for he
could have paid one mixed with copper or with any ore, since no test was
made. In order therefore that the royal and the public advantage might
at the same time be provided for, the advice of the king himself having
been beard on this matter, it was decreed that the burning or testing of
the farm should take place in the aforesaid manner.
D. Why do you say "the public advantage" ?
M. Because the sheriff, feeling himself wronged by the combustion of
the deteriorated money, when he is about to pay his farm, takes careful
heed that the moneyers placed [58] under him do not exceed the bounds of
the established standard; and when he has found them out, they are so
punished that others may be frightened by their example.
D. Ought then a blank farm to be paid by all the counties, or should
a test be made in the case of all the counties ?
M. No; but those which by ancient right are said to belong to
the royal crown pay thus. Those, however, which pay the fisc for some
incidental causes, render their dues by tale alone; such are Shropshire,
Sussex, Northumberland and Cumberland. It is open to the sheriff,
instead of a blank farm, to pay the weight of tested silver; and thus he
will escape the loss by combustion; provided, nevertheless, that the
melter of the king shall decree that the same is worthy to be received.
Thou knowest now what thou did'st ask about, namely, by whom and for
what cause the testing was instituted.
D. I see that, by this, is fulfilled to the letter what is
written each man's work shall be tried by fire." But now may it please
thee to go on with what thou hast begun.
M. So be it. It is in order, I believe, in accordance with the
arrangement of the plan laid down, that e proceed to treat of the
prerogatives of those who sit at the exchequer, whether officially, or
by order of the king.
D. I wonder very much for what reason, when thou wert treating
of the offices, thou did'st either refrain on purpose from speaking of
the usher of the upper exchequer and his office, or else did'st pass it
by, the evil of forgetfulness coming in the way.
M. I congratulate thee on thy memory of what has gone before.
; for, indeed, the glory of the teacher is in the proficiency of his
pupil. Thou knewest that the already mentioned usher received his pay
with the other officials, and therefore thou dost rightly ask what is
his office. it is then as follows:
As to the Usher of the Upper Exchequer.
That usher, alone, without an associate, guards the door of the
exchequer building: unless when, from his own [59] home, he takes
servants for the burdensome part of his office. Likewise the same man
guards the door of the chamber of secrets, which is situated next to the
exchequer building,. Thither go the barons when a doubtful question is
propounded to them in the exchequer, concerning which they prefer to
deliberate by themselves rather than in the hearing of all. But it is
chiefly on this account that they go apart by themselves, - lest namely,
the accounts which are being made up at the exchequer should be impeded;
and while they are delaying in private. council, the usual course of the
accounts goes on. But if any question should arise, it would be referred
to them. It is also free to the usher, with impunity, to preclude
ingress when he wishes to any men - even if great in authority - who are
not necessary to the matter in hand. To those alone, who sit at the
exchequer by reason of their office or by mandate of the king, is
-voluntary ingress to either chamber permitted. But if they are persons
vouched for, who can not suitably go in when alone, one or two may be
shown into the outer building of the exchequer; but into the chamber of
secrets only the officials enter, others being excluded; unless when
they are called by their masters to perform some matters for the king.
Likewise the usher receives the summonses, made out and signed by the
marshall. When the exchequer of that term has been dissolved, he bears
them in his own person, or by means of a faithful messenger, throughout
England, as has been said above. He also, by command of the president,
calls into the latter's presence, when he needs them, the sheriffs, who
are dispersed in all directions outside the building. Likewise it
pertains to him to see to any of the small matters which are necessary
in the exchequer building-such as placing and preparing the seats around
the exchequer and the like. From the foregoing it is clear to thee, as
we believe, concerning the offices of those who sit at the exchequer. We
Will now show what are their rights or prerogatives by reason of their
sitting at the exchequer.
[60]
VIII. What are the rights and prerogatives of those sitting at the
Exchequer, by reason of their sitting there.
Still further, indeed, the tongue, of the detractor must continue to
spare us, and the tooth of envy, lest it leap upon us and tear us to
pieces ; for scarcely any of these things would come to thy knowledge if
we saw fit to insist, not on the customary names of things, but on some
exquisite scheme of words or on made-up appellations.
D. A novelty of words was the one thing I warned thee to shun
from the beginning, and I obtained from thee that thou should'st use
common and customary words with regard to common things, lest
unaccustomed novelty should disturb the rudimentary teachings. So,
therefore, as thou hast begun, may it please thee again, to continue thy
undertaking,. But if, when thou dost thus advance, the emulous mind or
tongue of a detractor should overtake thee, thou may'st obtain this from
him, that he who in his writings is without sin shall cast the first
stone at thee.
M. I willingly obey so long as that rule is observed. The
pre-eminence of those sitting at the exchequer consists in many things.
For whether they who sit there by his mandate are of the clergy or of
the curia regis,-from the day on which they come together, up to the
general departure, they are not called to any other cases under any
judges whatever; and if, by chance, they shall have been summoned, they
are excused by reason of their public function. But if those who sit
there are the accusers and not the accused, and have suits elsewhere,-it
shall be at their option either to have the case tried by a procurator,
or to postpone the day without any detriment to their rights. But if the
judge under whom their case is being tried, whether he be ecclesiastical
or lay, being ignorant of this law, shall, after the already mentioned
day of convocation to the exchequer, have cited any one of them, and
shall, perhaps, by a judgment have despoiled the absent one of his
possession or of some right,-by authority of the prince and by reason of
the session, his case shall be recalled to that state in which it was
before the citation. But the judge has not, on this account, merited
punishment; for [61] has followed out what belonged to his duty;
although, reason of the public function, it does not take effect. But if
he shall have been so cited that the decisive day, fixed for him and
determined by the law, shall come before the day of the convocation to
the exchequer, he shall not be able to excuse himself on that account,
or to evade the sentence of the judge, or to make it vain when declared
against him; even though the one day be so near to the other that he be
compelled to start on his journey. He shall, in that case, obtain for
himself a procurator or sponsor, and shall himself, bent on the king's
business, without guile, hasten to the court. The barons, moreover, who
sit at the exchequer shall pay nothing under the name of customs for the
victuals of their household bought in the cities and boroughs and ports.
But if an officer of the revenues shall have compelled one of them to
pay anything f or these, - if only one of his servants is present - who
is willing to prove by taking an oath that the things have been bought
for his master's use : to the baron indeed, the money exacted shall be
restored entire, and the scoundrel of a collector shall pay a pecuniary
punishment according to the quality of the person. Likewise if any one,
even if great in the kingdom, shall, with inconsiderate heat of mind,
injure any one who sits at the exchequer, through taunts or insults,-an
excess of this kind shall, if the president him-self is present, at once
receive a vindicating pecuniary punishment. But in the president's
absence if the man constantly denies the injury done and those sitting
there call out that he has said what he is charged with, he shall
nevertheless straightway be judged guilty to the extent of a fine to the
king whom he serves, unless he hastens to anticipate judgment by begging
mercy. But if those who sit at the exchequer shall have mutually
molested each other with any sort of contumelious attack, they shall
make peace again ; the others of their rank who serve with them acting
as mediators., in such wise that satisfaction shall be rendered by him
who, in their estimation, has injured an innocent person. But if he be
unwilling, to acquiesce, but rather persevere in his rashness, the
matter shall be laid before the president ; and afterwards, from him
each one shall receive justice. But if, [62] through the devil, the
instigator of evil, who does not look with unmoved eyes on the joyous
happiness of fraternal peace, it should happen that occasion for discord
should come up among the greater officials themselves; and thence -
which God forbid - a war of insults should arise; and, Satan adding
goads, peace cannot be restored by the other colleagues in those
labours:- the knowledge of all these things shall be reserved for the
prince himself; who, according as God, in whose hand it is, inspires his
heart shall punish the offence ; lest those who are set over others
should seem to be able to do with impurity what they decree should be
punished in others.
D. From this is manifest what Solomon says: "death and life are in
the power of the tongue," and likewise James; " the tongue is a little
member and boasteth great things."
M. So it is; but let us proceed concerning the prerogatives.
Common assessments are held at times throughout the counties, by
itinerant justices whom we call deambulatory or wandering judges; the
assessments are called common because, when the sum is known which is
required in common from those who have estates in the county, it is
distributed according to the hides of land, so that when the time comes
for payment at the exchequer, nothing of it is lacking. From all these
payments all those who, by mandate of the king, sit at the exchequer are
entirely free, so that not only are none of them exacted from their
domains, but also none from all their fiefs. If, however, one who sits
there has an estate either in farm or in custody,, or also as a pledge
for money, he shall not be exempt, but rather more subject for these to
the common law. In addition to and besides these exemptions, moreover,
he shall be free at the exchequer from murder-fines, scutages and
Danegeld. Moreover what pertains to him shall be de. ducted from the
fixed total, and shall be placed to the account of the sheriff in these
words : " remitted by writ of the king, to him or him this or that sum "
; although, in fact, he has no writ of the king concerning this.
Moreover he to whom anything has been remitted by the prince must to it
lest afterwards he require, from those in turn subject to him, the
amount which has been remitted; he had [63] the rather better be mindful
of that word, " forgive and be forgiven; for if this shall have been
found out, the prince, emulating the teaching of the Gospel, will
neither let him go nor forgive his debt, but perhaps will punish him a
hundred fold; for he is seen to abuse the favour bestowed on him, when
he irreverently exacts from others what has been freely forgiven to
himself.
D. It has been said, if I remember aright, that whoever, by
precept of the king, sits at the exchequer is free, by reason of his
sitting there, from certain things determined by the law. It was added
also, if I recollect well, that the exchequer sits at the Easter term ;
that, however, the things that are done then are not entirely
terminated, but that their consummation is reserved for the Michaelmas
term. Since, now, it is possible, nay, frequently happens, that some one
by mandate of the king is called to it at the Easter term, who at the
Michaelmas term has either paid his debt to fate, or is transferred by
order of the king to other business of the realm, or, what seems more
weighty with some, having in the meantime become hateful to the king, is
judged unworthy to perform such important duties : I ask does he who is
quit at the Easter term, in which few things are terminated but all
things renewed by repeating the summons, - does such a one deserve to be
absolved at the Michaelmas term, even when he has ceased to deserve his
seat at the exchequer and the favour itself of his prince?
M. Probably an abundance of reasons can be found for taking either
side of this question; but know that the choice of the royal
munificence, after the favour of absolution has once been indulged, is
always, even with pecuniary loss, more prone to the better part: indeed,
the principle of the gifts and of the remissions of the king is the
same, that just as his gifts cannot be recalled or re-demanded, so also
the acquittals of the king, which are commonly called pardons, can not
be invalidated. He therefore is free and absolved at the term of
consummation who in any way merited to be absolved at the preceding one.
D. Some things which have been said give me concern. First, that thou
dost say that anything is remitted to any one under this tenor of words:
"in pardons by writ of the [64] king, to him or him, this or that,"
when, nevertheless, he has obtained no writ of remission from the king.
For how it can happen that such writing of the roll is not found to be
false, I do not see.
M. It gives thee concern not without cause; for it has long
concerned me; -and, as I believe, the reason of thus writing is not yet
clear to all; wherefore, although it is no great matter that thou askest
about, nevertheless it is unusual and does seem absurd that that is said
to be remitted by writ of the king, which is always to be remitted
without a writ. For which reason I once attacked on this very matter the
bishop of Ely, as the man most skilled in this branch-blessed be his
memory for ever. He, the illustrious treasurer of that king of the
English, Henry I., and the nephew of him of Salisbury whom we mentioned
above, had a knowledge of the exchequer incomparable in his time: for
being supreme in those things which pertained to the dignity of his
standing, he made the fame of his name wide-spread; so that almost alone
in the kingdom he so lived and died that no envious tongue dares to
blacken his glory. He, moreover, being frequently requested by the
illustrious king, Henry the Second, reformed the knowledge of the
exchequer which, the time of warfare having lasted for many years, had
almost entirely died out; and, like another Esdras, sedulous restorer of
the Bible, renewed the form of its whole arrangement. The prudent man,
indeed, thought it better to mark down for posterity the laws
constituted by the ancients, rather than, by his silence, to bring it
about that new ones should be made. For modern times, in the matter of
gaining money, have scarcely dictated laws gentler than the former ones.
From him, therefore, in this matter, this is the kind of answer I
received; "brother, he who has ears eager to hear, easily finds the
tongue of a detractor; even he who has them not will not easily escape
the same. It was thus that there came to king Henry I. a certain man
having the tongue of a serpent, saying to him: 'your barons who sit at
the exchequer, why do they not pay the dues that arise from their lands?
For some have; fixed payments at the exchequer for sitting there; some
also, on account of their office, have estates and their fruits hence,
therefore, a [65]heavy loss falls on the fisc." When, therefore, he,
urging the gain that it would be to the prince, repeatedly returned to
the attack, these words at length possessed the latter's mind to such an
extent, that he ordered all the established dues to be paid by all and
to be remitted to no one unless someone should have obtained from him an
express mandate concerning this: and it was done accordingly. But as
time went on, when the prince remembered the counsel of Achitopel, he
repented of having acquiesced. He decreed therefore, that all the
aforesaid payments should be computed to those who served there,
considering the loss of a small sum of money as nothing in comparison
with the great honour gained. And so he despatched his writ to the
exchequer, to the effect that those sitting there should, by a perpetual
law, be free from these payments. From this writ, therefore, it was said
then and is said now, "remitted by the king's writ"; and so it came
about that what was granted to the fathers should even now continue in
the case of their posterity. We remember ourselves in modern times to
have seen a similar payment to this, which, after all this time was
computed to those who deserved to be absolved under a similar tenor of
words. For our lord King Henry II., at the Michaelmas term of the 24th
year of his reign, ordered that the knights of the Temple, and
the brothers Hospitallers, and the monks of the Cistercian order, to
whom, by the privileges in their charter, he had long since indulged
quittance of all things pertaining to money - jurisdiction over life and
members being excepted, - should really now be quit of all things
pertaining money throughout the different counties; so that henceforth
they should not be compelled to bring their charters to the exchequer.
And the authority of the royal piety decreed this-that thus once for
all, in the consideration of the barons they should be freed of all
these things lest those who have gone over to the enjoyment of a better
life, and are obliged the more to have freedom for prayer, should be
compelled for such a cause to make a tedious and useless delay with
their charters at the exchequer. By the counsel, therefore, and the
deliberation of the barons who were present, a writ of the lord king was
drawn up under this tenor; " I quit claim the knights of the Temple [66]
of five marks which are exacted from their vassals for default, and I
prohibit that now from them or their vassals or their lands anything be
exacted or received which pertains to money. These being witnesses,
there." And in like manner as to the brothers Hospitallers and to the
aforesaid monks. By the authority of this mandate, therefore, they will
henceforth be quit, throughout the several counties of all things which
pertain to money: so that that which we mentioned above may rightly be
spoken of in the yearly roll as " remitted by writ of the king."
D. I have understood very well what has been said. Now, if it
please thee, do not delay to make clear what are scutage, murdrum and
Danegeld. They seem, indeed, to be something barbarous; but they concern
me the more for the reason that, as thou sayest, those who minister at
the exchequer are free from them.
IX. What Scutage is, and why it is so called.
It happens sometimes that, when the machinations of enemies threaten
or attack the kingdom, the king decrees that, from the different
knights' fees, a certain sum shall be paid, - a mark, namely, or a
pound; and from this come the payments or gifts to the soldiers. For the
prince prefers to expose mercenaries, rather than natives to the
fortunes of war. And so this sum, which is paid in the name of the
shields, is called scutage. From this, moreover, they who sit at the
exchequer are quit.
X. What Murder is, and why so called.
Murder (murdrum), indeed, is properly, called the secret death of
somebody, whose slayer is not known. For "murdrum " means the same as "
hidden " or " occult. Now in the primitive state of the kingdom after
the Conquest those who were left of the Anglo-Saxon subjects secretly
laid ambushes for the suspected and hated race of the Normans, and, here
and there, when opportunity offered, killed them secretly in the woods
and in remote places: as vengeance for whom - when the kings and their
ministers had for some years, with exquisite kinds of tortures, raged
against the Anglo-Saxons; and they, [67] nevertheless, had not, in
consequence of these measures, altogether desisted, - the following plan
was hit upon, that the so called "hundred," in which a Norman was found
killed in this way - when he who had caused his death was to be found,
and it did not appear from his flight who he was - should be condemned
to a large sum of tested silver for the fisc; some, indeed, to 36, some
to £44, according to the different localities and the frequency of the
slaying. And they say that this is done with the following end in view,
namely, that a general penalty of this kind might make it safe for the
passers by,-and that each person might hasten to punish so great a crime
and to give up to justice him through whom so enormous a loss fell on
the whole neighbourhood. Know that from such payments, we have said,
those who sit at the exchequer are free.
D. Ought not the occult death of an Anglo-Saxon, like of a Norman, to
be reputed murders?
M. By the original institution it ought not to, as thou hast heard:
but during the time that the English and Normans have now dwelt
together, and mutually married ,and given in marriage, the -nations have
become so intermingled that one can hardly tell to-day - I speak of
freemen - who is of English and who of Norman race; excepting, however,
the bondsmen who are called " villani," to whom it is not free, if their
lords object, to depart from 'the condition of their station. On this
account almost -always when any one is found thus slain to-day, it is
punished as murder; except in the case of those who show ,certain
proofs, as we have said, of a servile condition.
D. I wonder that this prince of singular excellence, and this
man of most distinguished virtue, should have shown such mercy towards
the race of the English, subjugated and suspected by him, that not only
did he keep the serfs by whom agriculture could be exercised, from harm,
but left even to the nobles of the kingdom their estates and ample
possessions.
M. Although these things do not pertain to the matters undertaken and
concerning which I have bound myself, I will nevertheless freely expound
what I have heard on these matters from the natives themselves. After
the Conquest of the kingdom, after the just overthrow of the [68]
rebels, when the king himself and the king's nobles went over the new
places, a diligent inquiry was made as to who there were who, contending
in war against the king had saved themselves through flight. To all of
these, and even to the heirs of those who had fallen in battle, all hope
of the lands and estates and revenues which they had before possessed
was precluded: for it was thought much for them even to enjoy the
privilege of being alive under their enemies. But those who, having been
called to the war, ha4i not yet come together, or, occupied with family
or any kind of necessary affairs had not been present,-when, in course
of time, by their devoted service they had gained the favour of their
lords, they began to have possessions for themselves alone; without hope
of hereditary possession, but according to the pleasure of their lords.
But as time went on, when, becoming hateful to their masters, they were
here and there driven from their possessions, and there was no one to
restore what had been taken away,-a common complaint of the natives came
to the king to the effect that, thus hateful to all and despoiled of
their property, they would be compelled to cross to foreign lands.
Counsel at length having been taken on these matters, it was decided
that what, their merits demanding, a legal pact having been entered
into, the ' y bad been able to obtain from their masters, should be
conceded to them by inviolable right: but that, however, they should
claim nothing for themselves by right of heredity from the time of the
conquest of the race. And it is manifest with what discreet
consideration this provision was made, especially since they would thus
be bound to consult their own advantage in every way, and to strive
henceforth by devoted service to gain the favour of their lords. So,
therefore, whoever, belonging to the conquered race, possesses estates
or any thing of the kind,-be has acquired them, not because they seemed
to be due to him by reason of heredity, but because his merits alone
demanding, or some pact intervening, he has obtained them.
D. I do not exactly know what. is a " centuriata " or hundred.
M. Wait a little; thou wilt know later in its proper place; that is,
in the chapter on the Domesday book. Now [69] let us proceed concerning
Danegeld, and pay a little attention, so that the reason of this name
may be clear to
XI. What is Danegeld, and why so called.
Our island content with its own, does not need the goods of
the stranger;
Therefore, with very good right, our predecessors have called
it,
Truly the lap of riches; the home, too, of every delight.
On account of this she has suffered innumerable injuries from
outsiders; for it is written: " marked jewels attract the thief." For
the robbers of the surrounding islands, making an irruption and
depopulating the shores, carried off gold and silver and all sorts of
precious things. But when the king and the natives, drawn up in warlike
array, pressed on in defence of their race, they betook themselves to
flight by sea. Now among these robbers almost the first, and always the
most ready to do harm, was that warlike and numerous race of the Danes;
who, besides possessing the common avarice of plunderers, pressed on the
more eagerly because they claimed, of ancient right, some part in the
domination of that kingdom, as the history of the Britons more fully
relates. In order, therefore, to ward these off, it was decreed by the
English kings that, from each "hide " of the kingdom, by a certain
perpetual right, two shillings of silver should be paid for the use of
the brave men who, patrolling and carefully watching the shores, kept
off the attack of the enemy. Therefore, since principally on account of
the Danes this revenue was instituted, it is called " Danegeldum " or "
Danegeldus." This, therefore, under the native kings, was paid yearly,
as a been said, until the time of king William I. of the race and people
of the Normans. For in his day the Danes as well as the other robbers by
land and by sea restrained their hostile attacks, knowing to be true
that which is written, "when a strong man armed keepeth his palace his
possessions are in peace." For they also knew, indeed, that men of
surpassing valour do not suffer injuries to go unpunished. When,
therefore, the land had long been [70] quiet under the rule of this
king, he became unwilling that that should be paid as a yearly tax which
had been exacted by the urgent necessity of a time of war; nor yet,
however, on account of unforeseen cases, did he wish it to be entirely
omitted. It was occasionally paid, therefore, in his time and in that of
his successor: that is, when, from outside nations, wars or rumours of
wars arose. But whenever it is paid, those who sit at the exchequer, are
free from it, as has been said. The sheriffs too, although they are not
counted under the barons of the exchequer, are quit of this for their
domains on account of the labour of collecting the tax. Know, moreover,
that the domains of any one are called those which are cultivated at his
own expense or labour, and likewise those which are possessed by his
serfs in his name. For the serfs, according to the law of the kingdom,
not only may be transferred by their lords from those places which they
now possess to others; but they themselves also are sold or sundered in
every possible way; with right they themselves, as well as the lands
which they cultivate in order to serve their masters, are considered
domains. Likewise it is said by those to whom the ancient dignity of the
exchequer was known from what they had seen with their own eyes, that
its barons are free for their domains, of essarts (clearance-fines) of
the forests. With whom we also agree; adding the reservation, that they
may be called quit of those essarts which had been made before the day
on which the illustrious king Henry I. bade farewell to human affairs.
For if they were quit of all, whenever made or to be made, the barons
would seem to be free with impunity, according to their own will and
judgment, to cut down their woods, in which the royal forest consists;
which they can, in fact, by no means did with impunity, unless the
consent of the king or of the chief forester has first been gained. Nay,
those who have their domicile in the forest may not take from their own
woods what they want for the necessary uses of their homes, unless by
view of those who are deputed to guard the forest. But there are many
who wish to prove by their arguments that no one, by reason of his seat
at the exchequer, is free from these essarts. If any one at all of those
sitting there should, by any misfortune, [71] commit a fault against the
king for which be would merit to be punished with a pecuniary fine, he
would not be freed that punishment except by special mandate of the
king. Since, therefore, a clearance is a fault committed against the
forest of the king, he who thus errs and on this account receives a
penalty, ought not, as they say, to be acquitted unless by express
mandate of the king. Now although this reasoning is subtle and seems to
some almost sufficient, it is to be said, in objection to it, that the
penalty for clearance is fixed and common to those who err in this way,
so that, namely, for the clearance of one acre of wheat land one
shilling is paid; but for an acre in which oats are sown, six pence, by
a perpetual law. Moreover from these items a certain total sum arises,
for which the sheriff is compelled -to account to the exchequer; just as
from the established two shillings or one from the different "hides,"
one sum arises which is called the common assessment. Since, therefore,
in these respects, the essart has an express similitude with the common
assessment, as has been said, it would seem as if the barons, -not
without justice, should be considered quit from the essarts, just as
from the other common assessments. Likewise the authority, not to be
despised, of custom and long usage is against them (the cavillers). For
those whose memory is hoary call to mind that it was so in past times. I
myself, who speak with thee, have, in modern times, looked upon Robert,
earl of Leicester, a discreet man, learned in letters and versed in
matters of the law. He, while having an inborn virtue of mind, became
also an emulator of his father's prudence: his industry examined into
many matters under our prince Henry the Second, whom neither fictitious
prudence nor dissimulated folly deceives ; so that, by the king's order,
not only at the exchequer did Robert obtain the dignity of president,
but also throughout the whole kingdom. He once, when the visitation of
the forests which the commonly call the ,view" (reguarda), and which
takes place every third year, was at hand, obtained a writ of the king
to the effect that he should be quit of whatever might be demanded from
his land for essarts, the sum being stated to which these amounted: and
when the writ was brought end publicly read before the [72] exchequer,
all were amazed and wondered, saying: does not this earl invalidate our
privileges ? " And while those who sat there mutually regarded each
other, Nigel of blessed memory, the whilom bishop of Ely, began,
speaking thus with modesty: " My lord earl, thou dost seem to have
invalidated, by this writ, the prerogative of the exchequer, since thou
hast obtained a mandate of the king for those things from which thou, by
reason of thy seat at the exchequer, art free; and if one may logically
draw an inference by deduction from the major term, whoever does not
obtain a writ of the king concerning his essarts, will soon become
answerable for their payment; but, with all due reverence, this mode of
absolution is pernicious on account of the example it sets". When,
therefore, as happens in doubtful cases, some were of one opinion,
others of another, there was brought in, as a valid argument in this
matter, the yearly (pipe) roll of the time that great king of whom we
spoke above, under whom the dignity and the knowledge of the exchequer
are said to have flourished in a high degree: and something was found
which seemed to justify the bishop who made the assertion concerning the
prerogative of those sitting there. Having heard these things, the earl,
after deliberating a little with himself, said: I confess that in this
matter I obtained a writ of the king, not that I might invalidate your
right, but that thus, without trouble, I might avoid the too importunate
exaction-unknown, however, to the king-of the collectors. Abandoning his
writ, therefore, he chose to be absolved on account of the prerogative
of his seat. Some time after, when the aforesaid bishop, detained by
infirmity could not be present, and I myself supplied, as well as I
could, his place at the exchequer, it happened that essarts were paid;
when, therefore', what had been exacted from. his domain had been paid,
I complained publicly, alleging the right of exemption. By the common
counsel and verdict of all, therefore, the sum which had been already
paid was restored to me, Reserving, therefore, what bad been raised from
his domain, I restored to his serfs, in its entirety, what had been
exacted from each one, so that the memory might survive and be witness
in this matter.
[73]
D. With all due reverence, one should not use examples but reasons in
these matters.
M. That is so; but it happens, at times, that the causes of things
and the reasons of sayings are secret, and then it suffices to bring up
examples- relating to them; especially if they are taken from the cases
of prudent men, whose deeds are circumspect and are not done without
reason. But whatever we have said about these things, taking part for
this privilege or against it, thou may'st be sure that in this matter we
have called nothing certain, unless what the authority of the king
decreed should be observed. But the account of the forests and also the
punishment or absolution of those who transgress with regard to them,
whether it be a pecuniary or a corporal one, is kept separate from the
other judgments of the kingdom, and is subjected to the will of the king
alone or to that of some one of his intimates specially deputed for this
purpose. It subsists by its own laws, which, they say, are not subject
to the common law of the kingdom, but to the voluntary decree of the
princes; so that whatever has been done according to its law may be said
to be not absolutely just, but just according to the law of the forest.
The forests, moreover, are the sanctuaries of kings and their greatest
delight; thither they go for the sake of hunting, having laid aside
their cares for a while, so that they may be refreshed by a short rest.
There, the serious, and at the same time natural uproars of the court
having ceased, they breathe in for a while the boon of pure liberty;
whence it comes that they who transgress with regard to the forest are
subject to the royal displeasure alone.
D. From my earliest youth I have learned that it is wrong for a
prudent person to prefer to suffer ignorance rather than to demand the
causes of things that have been said; in order, therefore, that the
foregoing may more fully be made clear, do not put off revealing what a
forest is, and what an essart.
[74]
XII What is the Forest of the King, and what the reason of this
name.
M. The forest of the king is the safe dwelling-place of wild beasts;
not of every kind, but of the kinds that live in woods; not in all
places, but in fixed ones, and ones suitable for the purpose ; whence it
is called " forestal" the "e" being changed into " o," as if it were "
feresta -i.e., an abiding place for wild beasts.
D. Is there a forest of the king in each county?
M. No; but only in the wooded ones, where the wild beasts can
have their lairs and ripe nourishment: nor does it matter to whom the
woods belong, whether to the king, or to the nobles of the kingdom,-the
wild beasts can none the less run around everywhere free and unharmed.
XIII What is an Essart, and why so called.
Essarts are commonly called what are named " occationes " in the
works of Isidor; that is, when any groves or thickets in the forest,
which are fit for pasture and for lairs, are cut down; after which same
cutting down and tearing up by the roots, the land is dug up and
cultivated. But if groves are so cut that anyone standing still, leaning
against the remaining stump of an oak, or any other tree that has been
cut down, shall, on looking round, perceive five that have been cut
down, they consider this a wilderness (vastum)-that is, a place
laid waste (vastatum) - so called by syncope. Such an excess,
moreover, even if committed in one's own groves, is considered so grave
that a man may never be acquitted of it by reason of his seat at the
exchequer; but he ought rather to be pecuniarily punished according to
the power of solvency of his rank. Thus far I have expounded, to some
extent figuratively, what succinct brevity has permitted, and what has
at short notice offered itself to my mind, concerning the dignities of
those sitting at the exchequer. But in these matters I have constituted
for the munificence of the kings no bounds of which they may not
overstep ; they are all inclined, moreover, on account of the grace
entrusted to them to [76] the glory of their prerogative, especially
those who are truly wise. But he most of mundane princes, the very great
and illustrious king of the English, Henry the Second, strives always to
increase the dignities of those serving under him; knowing for certain
that benefits bestowed on his followers purchase, with titles of
immortal fame, the glory of his name. Now then, let us turn our flowing,
pen to other things.
D. It is in order, if I mistake not, as I seem to have
gathered from the foregoing, that thou should'st proceed concerning the
'king's seal and the doomsday book, of which the first, if I remember
aright, is kept in the treasury and not allowed to leave it.
M. Nay, both of them, and also very many other things.
XIV. That "Thesaurus" sometimes means the money itself;
sometimes the, place where it is kept.
Know, moreover, that "thesaurus" sometimes means the money in cash
itself, as well as gold or silver vessels of different kinds, and
changes of vestments. According to this acceptation it is said, "where
thy treasure is, there will thy heart be also" For "thesaurus " is
called the place in which it reposes, therefore "thesaurus" =
"aurithesis," namely, the place of gold, So that if one asks about some
one where he is, it may not incongruously be replied: "he is in the
'thesaurus,'" that is, in the place where the "thesaurus" is kept. Cash
money, indeed, or the other things mentioned, having once been put in a
safe place, are not taken a way except when, by mandate of the king,
they are sent to him to be distributed for his necessary uses. But there
are many things in the repository vaults of the treasury which are
carried around, and they are shut up and guarded by the treasurer and
the chamberlains, as has been more fully shown above: such are the seal
of the king concerning which thou dost ask, the doomsday book, the
so-called exactory roll, which some writ name the writ of farms.
Likewise the great yearly (pipe) rolls, the rolls of accounts, a
numerous multitude of privileges, counter-tallies of receipts, and rolls
of receipts and write, of the king concerning outlays of the treasury,
[76] and many other things which, when the exchequer is in session, are
necessary to its daily uses.
XV. What use is made of the Royal Seal which is in the Treasury.
What ought to be the use of the royal seal is clear from the
foregoing: for with it are sealed the summonses that are made out, and
the other mandates which pertain solely to the exchequer of the king;
nor is it carried elsewhere; but, as has been said above, is guarded by
the chancellor through a representative. It has, moreover, stamped upon
it, exactly the same image and inscription as the deambulatory seal of
the court, so that both- may be known to have the same authority of
commanding, and that he who acts counter may be similarly judged guilty
according to the one or the other. Then that book about which thou dost
ask is the inseparable companion of the royal seal in the treasury. From
Henry, formerly bishop of Winchester, I have heard as follows the cause
of this institution.
XVI. What is the Doomsday Book, and for what purpose composed.
When that distinguished conqueror of England, a relative by blood of
this same prelate, had -subdued the utmost limits of the island to his
rule, and had tamed the minds of the rebels by examples of terrible
things,- he decreed, lest a free opportunity of erring should again be
given, that the people subject to him, should submit to written custom
and laws. The English laws, therefore, being laid before him according
to their triple distinction, that is, Mercian law, Dane law, and West-
Saxon law, some he rejected; others, moreover, approving, be added to
them the transmarine laws of Neustria which seemed most efficacious for
protecting the peace of the kingdom. At length, lest anything should
seem to be wanting to the sum of all his forethought, having taken
counsel, he despatched from his side the most discreet men in circuit,
throughout the kingdom. By these men, in this way, a [77] diligent
description of the whole land was made with regard to its woods as well
as its pastures and meadows, agriculture; and this description having
been noted down in common words, it was collected into a book; in order,
namely, that each one, content with his own right, should not with
impunity usurp that of another. Moreover the survey is made by counties,
by hundreds and by hides, - the name of the king being marked at the
very head, and then, in turn, the names of the other lords according to
the dignity of their standing; that is to say those who are tenants in
chief of the king. Moreover against the separate names thus arranged in
order are p aced numbers by means of which, below, in the course of the
book itself, whatever concerns these persons is more easily found. This
book is called by the natives Domesday; that is, by metaphor, the day of
judgment; ,for just as a sentence of that strict and terrible last trial
cannot possibly be eluded by any art of tergiversation: so when in the
kingdom, contention shall arise concerning things that are there noted,-
when the book is appealed to its sentence can not be scorned or avoided
with impunity. On this account we have named this book the book of
dooms; not that, in it, a sentence is given concerning any doubtful
matters that come up, but that from it, as from a judgment that has been
given, it is not allowed in any way to depart.
D. If it please thee, explain what is a county, what a hundred, what
a hide; otherwise the things that have been said will not be clear.
XVII. What is a Hide, what a Hundred, what a County, according to
the common opinion.
M. The country people know this better; but, as we have heard from
them, a hide, from its primitive institution, consists of a hundred
acres: but a hundred, of several hundred hides-the number not being a
fixed one, however; for one consists of many, another of fewer hides.
Hence thou wilt frequently find that, in the old privileges of the
Anglo-Saxon kings, a hundred (hundredus) is frequently called a
centuriate (centuriata). The county, [78] moreover, consists in
like manner of hundreds that is, some of more, some of less, according
as the land has been divided by discreet men. The county, then, is
called from the count, or the count from the county. It is the count,
moreover, who receives the third portion of what comes from the pleas in
each county. For that sum, which, under the name of a farm, is required
from the sheriff, does not all arise from the revenues of estates, but
in great part from pleas; and of these the count (comes) receives
the third part; he is therefore said to be so called because he shares
with the fisc, and is a companion (comes) in receiving. Then the
sheriff (vice-comes) is so called because he supplies the place
of the count in those pleas in which the count shares by reason of his
dignity.
D. Do the counts receive those payments from each and. all the
counties?
M. By no means: those alone receive them whom the munificence
of the kings, in view of service rendered, or of distinguished probity,
has made counts, and on whom this same munificence has decided, by
reason of this dignity, to confer them; on some as hereditary, on others
for their own persons only.
XVIII. What is the Exactory Roll.
The exactory roll is that in which, distinctly and diligently enough,
are marked the farms of the king which arise from the separate counties,
and the sum of which may not, indeed, be diminished, but is frequently
increased by the laborious diligence of the justice.' The reason of the
remaining rolls, such as the yearly one and the others which we
mentioned above, which are in the treasury and do not leave it, is clear
enough from the foregoing. It remains, therefore, for us to turn to the
greater and more necessary institutions of the exchequer, in which, as
has been said, consists the more excellent, the more useful, and from
many the more occult knowledge of the exchequer.
BOOK SECOND.
[79] Hear me, brother, and, with the ears of one hearing, understand
what I say unto thee. Thou wilt not repent thy willingness to spend a
short portion of time snatched idleness upon matters of business. For
there are me who do not blush to say in their hearts, "he who a up
knowledge lays up also grief " : to these learning burden, and it is a
pleasure to play the fool. Therefore the truth is far removed from those
who, fearing the pleasant labour of a pursuit, fall into error. They
become blind of heart, therefore, and, not seeing the dangers of the
way, fall headlong down a precipice. But thee, oh brother, let no day
find idle ; lest, perchance that condition of human infirmity which is
most prone to evil subject thee, off thy guard, to certain of the worst
things. But if, by chance, thou hast no affairs, nevertheless invent
some honest ones, that thy mind, always exercised, maybe more open to
learning. Attend, therefore, a little to those matters in which thou
hast involved us; not that from them thou wilt harvest great fruits of
labour, but only lest on be idle.
D. I fear lest the twilight of approaching night may put a
sudden end to the matters in hand, and lest, omiting many necessary
things, thou wilt so hasten that thou will'st free thyself of the
importunity of an interrogator.
M. Nay, I rather feared lest, after thy long silence, a long
suppressed laugh might be shaking thee on account of my rustic style ;
or lest, perchance, thou wert silently cogitating how, without hurting
me, thou mightest pluck thyself from these matters to which thou hast
forced me. Therefore I confess that I had almost put an untimely end to
what I was saving: but, nevertheless, since thou art docile and the zeal
of attention has not yet grown tepid in thee, I will continue on the
path begun. For the purpose, therefore, of complying with the order of
business laid down, we must speak, in the first place, concerning
summonses: for what debts they are made out namely, and how, and for
what purpose. And that these matters may be more fully clear to thee,
let the last of these three [80] things be shown before the first - that
is for what purpose they are made.
[NOTE: ONLY THE TITLES OF BOOK SECOND ARE GIVEN HERE]
I: Summonses, indeed are made in order that the Exchequer may be
held.
How Summonses are made out.
II: How summonses differ according to the term.
For what Debts Summonses are made out.
III Manifold concerning the duties of the Sheriff.
IV For what causes the absence of the Sheriff is considered
condoned.
V How is that some estates are given blank, some by tale.
VI What are the fixed payments that are to be computed to the
Sheriff: alms, namely, and tithes, and liveries of both kinds, and lands
given.
VII What are to be computed through custom of the Exchequer alone,
that is without a writ.
VIII In what order those things are to be computer to the sheriff
which were spent in public works by a writ of the king not specifying
the amount.
IX That no one is absolved from a debt by a writ of the king which
does not express the amount, even though it give cause.
X Concerning escheats and trespass-lands, or, as we more generally
say, concerning purprestures and escheats.
XI Concerning the Rents of Woods.
XII Concerning Pleas and Covenants: in what order the accounts for
them are made when the required amounts are paid.
XIII Concerning the different kinds of persons who are not
solvent; with regard to the what persons an oath is offered by the
Sheriff, and under what tenor of words the oath shall be given.
XIV What chattels of debtors, when they do not pay of their own
free will, are not to be sold, and what order is to be observed in
selling.
XV That the Sheriff may take from the debtors of that debtor who
does not pay the king, the debt due to the king.
XVI That the Sheriff may take from the estates of him who does not
pay, that which is required, even if, after the time when he commenced
to be bounden to the king, he have alienated in any way.
XVII That a Sheriff is not allowed to receive money due to himself
from those who do not pay the king: and what is to be done if he should
happen to receive it.
XVIII How a husband is to be called to account for a wife or a
wife for a husband, if he or she be not solvent.
XIX That there is not the same manner of coercion for the king's
barons and for others in the matter of pecuniary penalties.
XX What is to be done when the steward, who has pledged himself to
render satisfaction, does not appear.
XXI What if he comes and does not give satisfaction, if he is a
knight. What if he is not a knight.
XXII How a lord shall be punished who as voluntarily exposed a
knight so that he himself may in the meantime be free.
XXIII What is to be done concerning those who make voluntary
offerings when they too do not pay.
XXIV As to Reliefs not voluntarily paid.
XXV What is to be done concerning birds offered, and at what time
a summons is to be sent for them.
XXVI Concerning the Queen's Gold.
XXVII That farms are to be answered for in one way and wardships
in another, and that the oath is to be given in different wordings.
XXVIII That an oath as to the truth of an account, being once
given, suffices once and for all.
The END
From Ernest F. Henderson, Select Historical Documents of the
Middle Ages, (London: George Bell and Sons, 1910), pp. 20-134
[Henderson gives the full text of Book Second]
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